From spluta at gmail.com Thu Mar 1 01:47:47 2007 From: spluta at gmail.com (Sam Pluta) Date: Thu Mar 1 01:47:59 2007 Subject: [dorkbotnyc-blabber] (no subject) Message-ID: <86C335DF-032C-4E20-A34E-D74FA87D1A36@gmail.com> Please excuse the cross-postings :< Hey Friends. At the CMC we are starting a monthly evening of laptop/electronic performance called "CMC F?n Night." The first one is this Thursday (March 1(tonight)). See the press release below. If it's not fun, it's poorly named, so come out and join the fun! -------------- Press release: This coming Thursday evening (March 1) marks the inaugural event in a monthly meeting devoted to informal performance and discussion of laptop improvisation in the New York area. We're calling these "CMC f?n nites" and our intention is to provide a dorkbot-like forum for artists and musicians involved in technological improvisation. This first event will feature performances and talk by: PG (Terry Pender and Brad Garton, possible video enhancements by Luke Dubois) Sam Pluta (audio and video improvisations) Nick Didkovsky (improvisational pieces by Dr. Nerve!) Please come to join us! We will be in the main space of the third floor of Prentis Hall, 632 W. 125th Street (just off Broadway). Visit the CMC web site [http://music.columbia.edu/CMC] for directions. -------------- Thanks and sorry for the clutter, Sam spluta@gmail.com www.samuelpluta.com myspace.com/sampluta myspace.com/exclusiveor myspace.com/glissandobinladen -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://music.columbia.edu/pipermail/dorkbotnyc-blabber/attachments/20070301/a59e7d7b/attachment.html From msweet37 at gmail.com Thu Mar 1 10:42:51 2007 From: msweet37 at gmail.com (Michael Sweet) Date: Thu Mar 1 10:43:05 2007 Subject: [dorkbotnyc-blabber] door chime In-Reply-To: <86C335DF-032C-4E20-A34E-D74FA87D1A36@gmail.com> References: <86C335DF-032C-4E20-A34E-D74FA87D1A36@gmail.com> Message-ID: <2C6C53EA-7629-4434-A5A8-2AA383E04F86@gmail.com> We have a client (that we built a sonic logo for) that would like to use it in a custom door chime. Does anyone have experience with this sort of thing? If your interested please give me a ring. There is a budget. And if successful, we'd probably build about 5-10 more for other locations. Thanks! --Michael Sweet Audiobrain (212) 242-9100 From luna44shiva at yahoo.com Thu Mar 1 11:04:55 2007 From: luna44shiva at yahoo.com (Jacek Maczynski) Date: Thu Mar 1 11:05:39 2007 Subject: [dorkbotnyc-blabber] (no subject) In-Reply-To: <86C335DF-032C-4E20-A34E-D74FA87D1A36@gmail.com> Message-ID: <171295.59574.qm@web55312.mail.re4.yahoo.com> WHAT TIME? Thanx j. --- Sam Pluta wrote: > Please excuse the cross-postings :< > > Hey Friends. At the CMC we are starting a monthly > evening of laptop/electronic performance called "CMC > F?n Night." > The first one is this Thursday (March 1(tonight)). > See the press > release > below. If it's not fun, it's poorly named, so come > out and join > the fun! > > -------------- > Press release: > > This coming Thursday evening (March 1) marks the > inaugural event in > a monthly meeting devoted to informal performance > and discussion of > laptop improvisation in the New York area. We're > calling these "CMC > f?n nites" and our intention is to provide a > dorkbot-like forum for > artists and musicians involved in technological > improvisation. This > first event will feature performances and talk by: > > PG (Terry Pender and Brad Garton, possible video > enhancements by Luke Dubois) > Sam Pluta (audio and video improvisations) > Nick Didkovsky (improvisational pieces by Dr. > Nerve!) > > Please come to join us! We will be in the main > space of the third > floor of Prentis Hall, 632 W. 125th Street (just off > Broadway). > Visit the CMC web site > [http://music.columbia.edu/CMC] for > directions. > > -------------- > > Thanks and sorry for the clutter, > > Sam > > spluta@gmail.com > www.samuelpluta.com > myspace.com/sampluta > myspace.com/exclusiveor > myspace.com/glissandobinladen > > > > > > > ........................................................................ > .........dorkbot: people doing strange things with > electricity.......... > ..........................http://dorkbot.org............................ > ........................................................................ > > ____________________________________________________________________________________ Don't pick lemons. See all the new 2007 cars at Yahoo! Autos. http://autos.yahoo.com/new_cars.html From spluta at gmail.com Thu Mar 1 11:56:14 2007 From: spluta at gmail.com (Sam Pluta) Date: Thu Mar 1 12:15:22 2007 Subject: [dorkbotnyc-blabber] (no subject) In-Reply-To: <171295.59574.qm@web55312.mail.re4.yahoo.com> References: <171295.59574.qm@web55312.mail.re4.yahoo.com> Message-ID: > WHAT TIME? > > Thanx > j. daaaaaaaaah! 8pm. Sam spluta@gmail.com www.samuelpluta.com myspace.com/sampluta myspace.com/exclusiveor myspace.com/glissandobinladen On Mar 1, 2007, at 11:04 AM, Jacek Maczynski wrote: > --- Sam Pluta wrote: > >> Please excuse the cross-postings :< >> >> Hey Friends. At the CMC we are starting a monthly >> evening of laptop/electronic performance called "CMC >> F?n Night." >> The first one is this Thursday (March 1(tonight)). >> See the press >> release >> below. If it's not fun, it's poorly named, so come >> out and join >> the fun! >> >> -------------- >> Press release: >> >> This coming Thursday evening (March 1) marks the >> inaugural event in >> a monthly meeting devoted to informal performance >> and discussion of >> laptop improvisation in the New York area. We're >> calling these "CMC >> f?n nites" and our intention is to provide a >> dorkbot-like forum for >> artists and musicians involved in technological >> improvisation. This >> first event will feature performances and talk by: >> >> PG (Terry Pender and Brad Garton, possible video >> enhancements by Luke Dubois) >> Sam Pluta (audio and video improvisations) >> Nick Didkovsky (improvisational pieces by Dr. >> Nerve!) >> >> Please come to join us! We will be in the main >> space of the third >> floor of Prentis Hall, 632 W. 125th Street (just off >> Broadway). >> Visit the CMC web site >> [http://music.columbia.edu/CMC] for >> directions. >> >> -------------- >> >> Thanks and sorry for the clutter, >> >> Sam >> >> spluta@gmail.com >> www.samuelpluta.com >> myspace.com/sampluta >> myspace.com/exclusiveor >> myspace.com/glissandobinladen >> >> >> >> >> >>> > ...................................................................... > .. >> .........dorkbot: people doing strange things with >> electricity.......... >> > ..........................http:// > dorkbot.org............................ >> > ...................................................................... > .. >> >> > > > > > ______________________________________________________________________ > ______________ > Don't pick lemons. > See all the new 2007 cars at Yahoo! Autos. > http://autos.yahoo.com/new_cars.html > ...................................................................... > .. > .........dorkbot: people doing strange things with > electricity.......... > ..........................http:// > dorkbot.org............................ > ...................................................................... > .. > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://music.columbia.edu/pipermail/dorkbotnyc-blabber/attachments/20070301/e96b38dc/attachment-0001.html From list at ericsinger.com Thu Mar 15 09:28:29 2007 From: list at ericsinger.com (Eric Singer) Date: Thu Mar 15 09:28:38 2007 Subject: [dorkbotnyc-blabber] Tranzducer.003 @ LEMURplex March 23rd Message-ID: Tranzducer.003 @ LEMURplex Once again, it's time to bring your ears down to the soundtastic living-room that is Tranzducer @ LEMURplex. LEMURplex's performance & gallery series will take place this month on March 23rd, 8-11 PM. Tranzducer.003 features Damon Holzborn's improvised musical textures, "peace noise" composer and improviser Joseph Grimm (a.k.a. The Wind-Up Bird) and "sine wave sensualist" Zach Layton. Interactive art work by LEMUR artists and founder Eric Singer will also be on display. Admission is $5. Note that Tranzducer normally occurs on the last Friday of every month at LEMURplex. We're one week early for March. See http://tranzducer.com for more info. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://music.columbia.edu/pipermail/dorkbotnyc-blabber/attachments/20070315/4a577d04/attachment.html From douglas at music.columbia.edu Thu Mar 15 18:27:29 2007 From: douglas at music.columbia.edu (douglas irving repetto) Date: Thu Mar 15 19:10:20 2007 Subject: [dorkbotnyc-blabber] [admin] test, please ignore Message-ID: prueba... -- ............................................... http://artbots.org .....douglas.....irving........................ http://dorkbot.org .......................... http://music.columbia.edu/cmc/music-dsp .......... repetto....... http://works.music.columbia.edu/organism ............................... http://music.columbia.edu/~douglas From douglas at music.columbia.edu Fri Mar 16 14:37:25 2007 From: douglas at music.columbia.edu (douglas irving repetto) Date: Fri Mar 16 14:37:31 2007 Subject: [dorkbotnyc-blabber] Fwd: [dorkbotsf-blabber] more useful resources for a dorkbot Message-ID: This site looks pretty great. .d >===8<==============Original message text=============== >Hi Karen, > >I have another link for you to please disseminate. I actually didn't >open-dork it yesterday, but I think the community could really benefit >from a new tool I've run across. I personally have nothing to do with >the site, but it is so great I can't help but evangelize. > >Anyway, the site is Octopart << http://octopart.com/ >>. They >aggregate the catalogs of Allied Electronics, Digi-Key, Mouser, and >Newark InOne (with more to come I've been promised) and present the >pricing and availability of the part you're looking for from across >all the sites. Anyone who has had to search a dozen different >suppliers' crappy websites knows how much of a help this is. You can >even link from their page directly to a buy screen. > >thank you and happy dorking, >Ben Tomassetti > -- ............................................... http://artbots.org .....douglas.....irving........................ http://dorkbot.org .......................... http://music.columbia.edu/cmc/music-dsp .......... repetto....... http://works.music.columbia.edu/organism ............................... http://music.columbia.edu/~douglas From list at ericsinger.com Fri Mar 16 14:49:55 2007 From: list at ericsinger.com (Eric Singer) Date: Fri Mar 16 14:51:17 2007 Subject: [dorkbotnyc-blabber] Fwd: [dorkbotsf-blabber] more useful resources for a dorkbot In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: See also http://findchips.com, which aggregates 20 different suppliers. Eric At 2:37 PM -0400 3/16/07, douglas irving repetto wrote: >This site looks pretty great. > > >.d > >>===8<==============Original message text=============== >>Hi Karen, >> >>I have another link for you to please disseminate. I actually didn't >>open-dork it yesterday, but I think the community could really benefit >>from a new tool I've run across. I personally have nothing to do with >>the site, but it is so great I can't help but evangelize. >> >>Anyway, the site is Octopart << http://octopart.com/ >>. They >>aggregate the catalogs of Allied Electronics, Digi-Key, Mouser, and >>Newark InOne (with more to come I've been promised) and present the >>pricing and availability of the part you're looking for from across >>all the sites. Anyone who has had to search a dozen different >>suppliers' crappy websites knows how much of a help this is. You can >>even link from their page directly to a buy screen. >> >>thank you and happy dorking, >>Ben Tomassetti >> > > >-- >............................................... http://artbots.org >.....douglas.....irving........................ http://dorkbot.org >.......................... http://music.columbia.edu/cmc/music-dsp >.......... repetto....... http://works.music.columbia.edu/organism >............................... http://music.columbia.edu/~douglas >........................................................................ >.........dorkbot: people doing strange things with electricity.......... >..........................http://dorkbot.org............................ >........................................................................ From douglas at music.columbia.edu Sat Mar 17 13:43:19 2007 From: douglas at music.columbia.edu (douglas irving repetto) Date: Sat Mar 17 13:43:25 2007 Subject: [dorkbotnyc-blabber] Calling All NYC Area Makers and Lovers of Gear, Hardware Projects, and Code Message-ID: Looks like fun! http://createdigitalmusic.com/2007/03/15/calling-all-nyc-area-makers-and-lovers-of-gear-hardware-projects-and-code/ .d -- ............................................... http://artbots.org .....douglas.....irving........................ http://dorkbot.org .......................... http://music.columbia.edu/cmc/music-dsp .......... repetto....... http://works.music.columbia.edu/organism ............................... http://music.columbia.edu/~douglas From kimchijello at gmail.com Sun Mar 18 13:22:51 2007 From: kimchijello at gmail.com (jeannie) Date: Sun Mar 18 13:23:03 2007 Subject: [dorkbotnyc-blabber] Seeking to hire / collaborate: custom interactive controller Message-ID: <9d0f08b00703181022u604f6411kac2ee955aa058b52@mail.gmail.com> hello! I'm seeking to hire and collaborate with an individual or organization who specializes in custom interactive and wireless MIDI controllers, ICUBE and using MAX/MSP Jitter. The pay and/or offer is negotiable. Prefer NYC residents. If interested, please send C.V., your website + contact info to: xxxxxx (removed by request) or call xxx.xxx.xxxx (removed by request) From list at ericsinger.com Thu Mar 22 12:35:14 2007 From: list at ericsinger.com (Eric Singer) Date: Thu Mar 22 12:37:08 2007 Subject: [dorkbotnyc-blabber] LEMUR Spring Art/Tech Classes + Two Events This Week Message-ID: LEMUR is pleased to announce Spring Art & Technology Classes at LEMURplex. Classes are listed below. Please go to http://lemurplex.org for more info and to register. Also, we have two LEMUR related events this week: Today (sorry for the short notice!) LEMUR Director Eric Singer will be at the MAKE Magazine's "Handmade Music" event at 7 pm in downtown Brooklyn. He will be showing his instruments the Sonic Banana and the Slime-o-tron, as well as his commercial i/o board MidiTron (http://miditron.com), which makes instruments like this possible. See http://www.makezine.com/blog/archive/2007/03/tonight_handmade_music_ni.html for details and directions. Tomorrow (Friday) at LEMURplex is Tranzducer.003, the third installment in our ongoing performance and gallery night. Tranzducer.003 features Damon Holzborn's improvised musical textures, "peace noise" composer and improviser Joseph Grimm (a.k.a. The Wind-Up Bird) and "sine wave sensualist" Zach Layton. Interactive art work by LEMUR artists will also be on display. See http://tranzducer.com for details. We hope to see you at a LEMUR event soon! **************************************************************************** Spring Classes Build Your Own Music/Video MIDI Controller: Creating a Sensor Instrument with MidiTron Mondays April 9, 16, 23, 6:30-9:30 pm Instructor: Leif Krinkle Imagine waving your hand and having an orchestra at your fingertips or tapping on a surface to explore a video archive. This is all possible through the use of MIDI and sensor-based technology. In three sessions, you will design and build a controller to create your art with the easy-to-use MidiTron (http://miditron.com) interface. Emphasis will be on hands-on learning. Basic electronics and Max/MSP/Jitter (http://cycling74.com/products/maxmsp) programming will also be covered. No previous knowledge of electronics, sensors or programming is assumed. Background information will be covered and the bulk of the class will be focused on building a working controller that you will take home and begin to create with. Examples of previous project ideas include a shoe that creates notes for each step and a glove that determines lighting cues in a theatrical performance. This is of interest to Artists, Musicians, Dancers, Actors, Engineers, Programmers, Lighting, Sound and Graphic Designers and others. **** Advanced Jitter: Beyond the Filters Tuesdays April 10, 17, 24, 6:30-9:30 pm Instructor: Joshua Goldberg This is a three-part workshop for Max users who are familiar with Jitter's (http://cycling74.com/products/jitter) paradigm and basic functionality and want to learn more. We will explore the following areas: advanced OpenGL programming, data exchange between MSP and Jitter, cv.jit and video tracking, non-realtime uses of the Jitter matrix system and much more. Prerequisites: Understanding of the Max scheduler and workflow, MSP signal capabilities, the Jitter matrix format and a basic understanding of OpenGL. (Don't fake it - this class is for advanced users.) **** Intermediate Microcontroller Programming for Artists: Going Further with the Arduino System Wednesdays, April 11, 18, 25, 6:30-9:30 pm Instructor: Roberto Osoria-Goenaga A project-based course that combines basic skills (acquired in Intro to Microcontroller Programming for Artists or elsewhere) with the creative vision to produce a final project. Students must be familiar with Arduino (http://www.arduino.cc) microcontroller programming, including writing code, serial communications and utilizing different forms of digital and analog input or output from the board. Students must also have a grasp of basic electronics, including circuits, Ohm's law, voltage dividers, motors and transistors. Students should own an Arduino board. Shopping for components online will be discussed during the first class, and students will create an electronics component order for their project, which will be verified for correctness before being submitted. Students should also have an idea for a project they would like to build. (Beginners should wait for the next Intro to Microcontroller Programming class to be offered.) **** Fun With Fiberglass: Basic Composite Fabrication Monday, April 30, 6:30-9:30 pm Instructor: Bob Huott Learn the skills and techniques used to build custom objects using fiberglass and epoxy. Students will get hands-on experience in various stages of the process, starting with sculpting a foam pattern, followed by glass lay-up and final finishing. Materials will include partially completed samples to work with so we can move between stages without waiting for epoxy to cure. Discussion will include ideas on how to integrate sensors, lighting or haptics into any project, and students are encouraged to bring their own project ideas to the class. Bob will also give a brief, inside-out tour of the Bean, his own composite sensor-based musical instrument. **** Robotics Control for Kinetic Art: Electronics and Software Saturday & Sunday, April 21, 22, 12:00-4:30 pm Instructor: Douglas Repetto This class focuses on electronic design and software control techniques for artists interested in using robotic or kinetic elements in their work. We will cover motor types and selection, basic electronics theory, motor control options and techniques, hardware interfaces and robotic control software. The class is a mix of theory and hands-on learning. Participants are encouraged to bring works-in-progress, surplus motors, mechanisms, etc., to be worked on in class. The class will not cover much of the mechanical side of robotics, so some experience with building mechanisms is recommended but not required. (Mechanics is covered in the Mechanics of Robotics course, which will be offered again in the next few months.) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://music.columbia.edu/pipermail/dorkbotnyc-blabber/attachments/20070322/cfdeae59/attachment-0001.html From msweet37 at gmail.com Tue Mar 27 09:23:57 2007 From: msweet37 at gmail.com (Michael Sweet) Date: Tue Mar 27 09:24:09 2007 Subject: [dorkbotnyc-blabber] nyc electronics store Message-ID: Is there a store in NYC that sells Parallax Basic Stamp modules? Thanks! --Michael Sweet From mang at ookeek.org Tue Mar 27 10:24:10 2007 From: mang at ookeek.org (Michael Ang) Date: Tue Mar 27 10:25:24 2007 Subject: [dorkbotnyc-blabber] nyc electronics store In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <4609290A.6010800@ookeek.org> Radio Shack sells a kit that includes the Basic Stamp. I think it's $80. The NYU Computer Store sells Arduino boards for $25, IIRC. FYI they sell a bunch of other useful components from Sparkfun and Jameco. - mang Michael Sweet wrote: > Is there a store in NYC that sells Parallax Basic Stamp modules? > > Thanks! > > --Michael Sweet > ........................................................................ > .........dorkbot: people doing strange things with electricity.......... > ..........................http://dorkbot.org............................ > ........................................................................ > From douglas at music.columbia.edu Tue Mar 27 17:08:28 2007 From: douglas at music.columbia.edu (douglas irving repetto) Date: Tue Mar 27 17:08:52 2007 Subject: [dorkbotnyc-blabber] Fwd: Call for volunteers for web-based music labeling game Message-ID: If you've got some time to waste, this is pretty fun. I'm donkeykong, you can't touch me. douglas >In an effort to collect some subjective ground-truth data about the >words people associate with musical sounds, we have put together a >web-based 'game' that involves labeling music clips with words that >other users would agree with: > > http://game.majorminer.com > >The descriptions collected from this site will be useful for >evaluation of automatic music description and information retrieval >tasks; if the experiment is successful, we hope to make the data, >along with our analysis, available to the music-ir community. > >Participation is completely voluntary and you can make as many or as >few judgments as you choose -- every data point is valuable. The only >personal information we'll associate with your descriptions is the >username you select. > >To comply with our institutional human subjects policy, participation >in this experiment is limited to fully-functional adults. Even though >teenagers are probably the most knowledgeable community when it comes >to describing the intricacies of the sub-sub-genre of the week, we >have to ask that no-one under the age of 18 participate! > >Thanks for your help, and look forward to the exciting results. > >Michael Mandel, Columbia University >Dan Ellis, Columbia University > -- ............................................... http://artbots.org .....douglas.....irving........................ http://dorkbot.org .......................... http://music.columbia.edu/cmc/music-dsp .......... repetto....... http://works.music.columbia.edu/organism ............................... http://music.columbia.edu/~douglas From douglas at music.columbia.edu Wed Mar 28 11:13:54 2007 From: douglas at music.columbia.edu (douglas irving repetto) Date: Wed Mar 28 11:31:53 2007 Subject: [dorkbotnyc-blabber] Fwd: IP and licensing on Instructables Message-ID: >From: "Christy Canida" >Subject: IP and licensing on Instructables >Date: Mon, 26 Mar 2007 21:46:19 -0700 > >Hello, > >You're receiving this email because of your interest in the >intersection of technology, art, science, intellectual property >rights, open source communities, media, and policy, and your >influence on these fields through your writing and discussion. >Instructables is a leader in >user-driven innovation, as discussed last Sunday >in >the New York Times, and we'd like to share the ideas and trends >we're seeing with you so we can get your feedback. > >Intellectual property (IP) rights are a hot-button issue among all >creators, but few understand the legal details. > >Those who create music, text, and images can copyright their work >under the Creative Commons and similar licenses, but no such >equivalent exists for patentable ideas. Instructables users may >choose to license the copyrightable portions of their Instructables >under any of the available licenses, but the problem remains- what >of potentially patentable IP? > >Current patent laws are geared toward large corporations- the law >has been written to accommodate and reinforce the needs and goals of >corporations and their lawyers. Individuals rarely have the time, >money, and legal knowledge to file well-written patents, much less >defend them- and a patent is only as good as the legal defense >mounted in its support. > >Given these systemic problems, what should an inventor do with his >or her idea? It turns out that one of the best things to do with a >new, good idea is to share it. > >Instructables is a great forum to publicize your idea, whether >you're interested in pursuing a patent or not. Under US patent law, >one has a year after publication of an idea to file a provisional >patent. Publishing an idea on Instructables provides exactly that >stake in the sand, and can bring plenty of discussion about prior >art and potential modifications to the original project. > >That year can be a valuable time to test the waters. The >Instructables community can help identify potential collaborators or >business partners, and investigate the appeal and potential >commercial viability of an idea. At the end of that year, you're >more likely to know whether it makes more sense to apply for a >provisional patent, or to simply let your idea pass into the public >domain. This idea is then unpatentable by others, so the idea will >be available to other inventors to use, build upon, and remix >without restriction. > >Instructables users are on the forefront of this discussion, testing >the viability of these new models. For more information, check out >Instructables founder and CEO Eric Wilhelm's Forum posts which cover >these issues in more depth, and particularly the user discussions in >the comments. >Open Source >Hardware and the Creative Commons >The value of >sharing patentable ideas >The cost of >aggressive licensing of University patents >Open-source >design of a keyboard system > >What do you think should be happening in these areas? How do you >see these developments affecting the individual inventor? We'd love >to hear your thoughts via either public or private channels. Feel >free to contact me at canida@instructables.com for more information. > >Thanks! > >Christy Canida >canida@instructables.com > -- ............................................... http://artbots.org .....douglas.....irving........................ http://dorkbot.org .......................... http://music.columbia.edu/cmc/music-dsp .......... repetto....... http://works.music.columbia.edu/organism ............................... http://music.columbia.edu/~douglas From spluta at gmail.com Wed Mar 28 20:01:11 2007 From: spluta at gmail.com (Sam Pluta) Date: Wed Mar 28 20:01:32 2007 Subject: [dorkbotnyc-blabber] =?iso-8859-1?q?F=FCn_Night_2?= Message-ID: <2A774489-C13D-4BF5-912A-010594B08E30@gmail.com> Announcing?the second installment of the fantastic new monthly series? CMC F?n Night #2!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Thursday March 29, 8:00 PM Computer Music Center, Prentis Hall, 632 W 125th St, 3rd Floor FREE Featuring performances by, and discussions with: Daniel Iglesia (computer) audio video improvisations Scott Smallwood (computer) audio performance The Loud Objects (Kunal Gupta & Tristan Perich, soldering irons) live musical circuit building! Info and recordings from previous fun nights at http:// music.columbia.edu/cmc/cmcfunnight -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://music.columbia.edu/pipermail/dorkbotnyc-blabber/attachments/20070328/1305718d/attachment.html