Projects tagged ‘creative’ and ‘java’


[4 total ]

2 Users

alchemy |’alkemē Figurative: a process by which paradoxical results are achieved or incompatible elements combined with no obvious rational explanation Alchemy is an open drawing project aimed ... [More] at exploring how we can sketch, draw, and create on computers in new ways. Alchemy isn’t software for creating finished artwork, but rather a sketching environment that focuses on the absolute initial stage of the creation process. Experimental in nature, Alchemy lets you brainstorm visually to explore an expanded range of ideas and possibilities in a serendipitous way. [Less]
Created about 1 month ago.

0 Users

Sonota Composer is a new approach to creating music. This project aims to empower all listeners of music to begin creating their own songs as a form of expression. It's so not a composer like ... [More] anything you've used before! Sonota takes a holistic approach to songwriting by additionally facilitating aspects both before (ideation, translation) and after (analysis, sharing) the musical composition phase. Users are encouraged to pull from experiences outside of music as a way to deepen their songs meanings and enable visual thinking/intuition; all the while adding layers of structural support and songwriting momentum. This project is the planning phase -- check out the current plan in DeveloperIdeas. If you would like to get involved, contact one of the project owners. [Less]
Created 12 months ago.

0 Users

JMTPSynchronizer If you need any help please join JMTPSynchronizer Discussion group . What is JMTPSynchronizer?JMTPSynchronizer is a very simple interface for adding, deleting and retrieving ... [More] content from your MTP device (For example Creative Zen Vision M), with a Linux desktop. More details on MTP and a list of music devices using this can be obtained from wikipedia MTP page. It has a front-end written in Java and a back-end written in c++. It has been written and tested on Ubuntu and can be used in it. It can possibly be used in other Linux distributions, but it hasn't been tested. In case you downloaded and used it in a distribution other than Ubuntu then please inform me. JMTPSynchronizer is written in my leisure time and currently has very poor code quality (especially the back-end written in C++). I have programmed a lot in Java but am very new to C++ and so I haven't followed any proper coding conventions or good guidelines in writing the back-end. However, now that I have realized that it actually works quite well, I am working on cleaning up the code. If you are interested in improving or making changes in it then please wait for now while I finish cleaning it up. I will soon release another version, which has proper code documentation and follows proper conventions. How do I install it?Installing JMTPSynchronizer involves two things. Installing the back-end API (command line mtpsyncxml) which it uses to interact with MTP device. Installing the Java front-end which calls the back-end API. Complete installation steps are here - Installation instructions. Follow the instructions there after reading this page. What does it depend on?It depends on the following libraries (these will be installed when you follow the installation instructions) - libmtp – A library to interact with mtp device. Can be obtained from http://libmtp.sourceforge.net libxml2 - A library for loading/saving xml files. Java - For best experience use IcedTea java provided in ubuntu repositories. Where can I get help?Read the instructions here on how to use it - Using JMTPSynchronizer. In case you have problems installing it then please contact me either directly (at my gmail id shown on right) or in Ubuntu forums (send me the link) and I will try my best to help you. If you need any help please join JMTPSynchronizer Discussion group . [Less]
Created about 1 year ago.

0 Users

A project of the communities at noisepages.com, createdigitalmusic.com, and createdigitalmotion.com Noiselab is a cross-platform, shared code project for work from the noisepages community and the ... [More] Hackday project, cross-geographical collaboration days for work on open source, creative code. The first hackdays include a set of projects for tangible music and visual interfaces. The preferred language for Noiselab projects is Java including Processinghttp://processing.org ...for music project code, we naturally encourage the integration of the cross-platform synthesis language SuperCollider. (Pd/Pure Data patches may also be used, but are not as easy to compare and modify as textual code.) [Less]
Created 4 months ago.