Interesting. I think it works for me. Which browsers?
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Replying to @chriswearly
Ah, I see it. Yeah. Sorry, might not have time to dig into this. Strangely, works great on Chrome or Safari.
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Replying to @chriswearly
Marcin Wichary Retweeted Marcin Wichary
Marcin Wichary added,
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Replying to @chriswearly @mwichary
Here's a fun example of an early 80s synthesizer that had a rare (at the time) 14-segment alpha display: The Kawai SX-240. You could type on the keyboard to name your patches. Not long after, the industry switched to LCD and VFD, and LED was relegated to numeric displays only.pic.twitter.com/8qcD9EhnCt
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I literally made an experiment where I turned my piano keyboard into a typing keyboard via (Web)MIDI – I had no idea this actually existed!
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Replying to @mwichary @chriswearly
It was a clever solution, I'm surprised more keyboard makers didn't adopt it. Most make you use a data wheel / slider or increment / decrement buttons.
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It’s also wonderfully circular – first typewriters were often based on piano keyboards before we invented button/level keyboards!pic.twitter.com/tRZyIzu942
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I wish I could afford the one you listed. So expensive, though.
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Replying to @mwichary @chriswearly
Yeah, it's a really good classic analog polysynth (8-voice!) with a unique sound, but kinda rare. It had a sibling, the SX-210, and was also marketed under the Teisco brand. I wish someone would do a good VST softsynth version of it.
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