smashtv Posted April 3, 2005 Report Posted April 3, 2005 Hey all!There is a short interview with these three in New Scientist magazine.Best quotes from the article:Was anyone else working on the digital synthesis of sound?I heard that Stanford University was doing some interesting work. I went over to visit them and they had rather large computers that churned away for 10 minutes and played one note.andThe late 1970s and early 1980s were exciting times for music technology. MIDI was developed soon after you developed your sampler. Did you take part in the discussions?I was at the meeting in Silicon Valley when the MIDI standard was first discussed. There was me, Bob Moog and Dave Smith, and there was someone from the music technology company Roland too. I remember that the three of us were in jeans and T-shirts and the man from Roland was in a suit.Peter Vogel, Fairlight founderRead here: http://www.newscientist.com/channel/opinion/mg18524921.400 Quote
stryd_one Posted April 3, 2005 Report Posted April 3, 2005 HeheheheheI was surprised that Peter Vogel hasn't learned from the mistakes of those who have made fools of themselves before him (most famously probably Bill Gates with the 64k RAM comment) when he said this:There will never be any chip you can put in your TV to do this because it's too complicated and expensiveHehehehe Quote
MMorph Posted April 6, 2005 Report Posted April 6, 2005 I went over to visit them and they had rather large computers that churned away for 10 minutes and played one note.I suppose their equipment were not ASIO compatible by that time yet ;-) Nice article though, thanks for the link! Quote
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