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holophonic recording

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Samplitude
Submitted by audiokid on Mon, 03/27/2017 - 15:39

Microphonics or microphony describes the phenomenon wherein certain components in electronic devices transform mechanical vibrations into an undesired electrical signal (noise). The term comes from analogy with a microphone, which is intentionally designed to convert vibrations to electrical signals.

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Submitted by ZenMusic on Mon, 04/29/2013 - 21:50

I once was a professional (mostly classical music) sound engineer, musican, composer. Now I'm returning to music ... electronic music composition.. I have a large (mostly) Buchla synthesizer system which has quadraphonic mixing (front-left, front-right, rear-left, rear-right ) with full panning ablitity, reverb etc.. (why doen't my "Enter" key work here?) ...

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Submitted by four_string on Mon, 01/17/2011 - 09:49

I'm doing a research project into binaural and holophonic recording for my final year project.

i have a set on in ear binaural microphones (SP TFD 2 mic binaural set) and did a preliminary recording earlier where i just placed the mic's inside my ears and recorded then played back

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Submitted by anonymous on Mon, 06/07/2010 - 18:12

The ability of an instrument to play more than one note simultaneously. Technically, a piano is 88 note polyphonic, although if the human element were to be taken into consideration, then it would take 8.8 people to fully exploit all 88 notes simultaneous. Likewise, a six-string guitar has a maximum polyphony of six notes.

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Submitted by anonymous on Thu, 09/04/2008 - 21:13

Hello all.
I am interested in purchase one of these Phonic Helix 18 FireWire Mixers, the MKI version, not the MKII.

I believe that Windows Vista is not supported by the MKI line. But there are drivers available for download for XP.

Since I run Windows Vista, I was thinking I might be able to use the Vista Compatibility Mode tool and use the Windows XP mode.