112 lines
8.2 KiB
Plaintext
112 lines
8.2 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 2192
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Title: HPR2192: Fun with Oscilloscopes
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2192/hpr2192.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 15:30:53
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---
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This is HPR episode 2192 entitled, fun with oscilloscope.
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It is hosted by M1RR0R5H4D35 and in about 10 minutes long and carry the next visit flag.
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The summary is, taking a look at oscilloscope music.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honesthost.com, get 15% discount on all shared
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hosting with the offer code, HPR15, that's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at an honesthost.com.
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Hello world, it's me again and today I'm going to talk about an interesting thing I
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found on the internet.
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It's a little bit different, not very practical but very very cool and maybe some of you
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out there already know it.
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I want to be the last guy to the party on this one but I just found out I just found this
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and it was really very interesting so what I'm talking about is oscilloscope music which
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I think is kind of a misnomer, technically it goes through a vector scope which is a type
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of oscilloscope and if I'm understanding it right it uses the deflection on X and Y axis
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and this genius guy he figured out that he could use that to draw pictures.
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Now obviously you can run audio through a oscilloscope and you get the waveform and it's
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all cool looking and everything and you know for a long time there's been a lot of
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visualization.
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I remember back in 1998 when AMP it had a lot of visualization plugins that used waveforms.
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Some of them were really cool.
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Some of them had 3DS celebration, they used OpenGL and now all these trippy colors and
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they're really really cool but this is definitely different.
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I would say it's similar to that but what you will actually see is not just 2D but 3D
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shapes and sometimes they're animated on the vector scope screen and they're being
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drawn by nothing but sound and if you're listening to this I'm going to put in the show notes
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and if you're listening to this on the go somewhere and you can't look at them right
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now that's fine but you owe it to yourself to look at some of the links I'm going to put
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in the show notes.
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The first one is just a video of this so that you can see what I'm talking about because
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some things you just have to see, my words cannot do them justice, the first video is just
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a track of music being played through a software oscilloscope so that you can see the effect
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it has.
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The guy that made this, actually first I should say if we jump down to the second link that
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is a link to the original tech mode video that first turned me on to this.
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The guy at the beginning of the video builds an old oscilloscope and then he shows you
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how to set it up for this sort of thing.
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I'd never heard of this but after I saw that video I did some more research of course
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because that's what you do right and I came across the video and this is the third link
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in the list of the guy who partially created this or the method of creating this because
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it's not what you think I promise, it's not just spaghetti noodles moving around the
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screen.
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There's some really intricate stuff that happens and you're going to really miss out
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if you don't watch the whole video but this video of the guy who essentially created
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this, he did it with Blender and I guess he figured out that when you run audio through
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the oscilloscope of course it makes the waveform on the screen and there's a mathematic
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principle behind that and he could reverse the process and by doing that he could draw
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3D shapes and it would play the corresponding sound so you could essentially use that
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to create music that would draw pictures on the screen, create 3D animated, just really
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cool stuff and that's another thing that's really kind of interesting about this is that
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it is music, it may not be music that you like but it is music, it does sound a little
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bit like techno which I know some people feel that's just like a bunch of random noise
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but when I say random noise it does sound like techno music, it doesn't sound like you're
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1995 modem dialing up into AOL or anything.
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So there's a video where he explains all that how he came upon this method of doing this
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and then the next link is the YouTube channel for the guy who actually creates the music
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and he's got a lot of videos there of the technique being demonstrated with a bunch of
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tracks so this guy actually created an album and you can buy it on his website which
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I'll also put down there for you, oscilloscopemusic.com, I don't think it's very much, I think
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it's like 5 pounds or something but it's an entire album of musical tracks that you
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can play through a vector scope if you have one and watch it do its thing.
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If you don't have a vector scope there is a software oscilloscope that you can get,
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I put a link for that too, it's cross-platform runs on Windows Mac and Linux, I think if you
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run it on Windows 10 you might have to grab a DLL file but it'll let you play these
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tunes through it and see the animations and the cool visualizations that it creates.
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But he also has on YouTube I think there's most of the tracks are there if you want to
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search for them, he's got them on his channel and you can see the music draw the sounds
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on the oscilloscope screen, it's very very cool, it's something I had not seen, I'd
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seen similar stuff like I said with waveform visualizations on Winamp and later of course
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Microsoft, whatever it was, media player that they shipped with I think what was it,
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7, version 7 and up had those built-in visualizations that weren't quite as good as the ones
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that Winamp had.
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So yeah I mean the technique isn't exactly new necessarily or the idea of it but it's
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not quite the same thing because what you're going to see in the screens like there's
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one of like a stick man riding a bicycle while the background which is like mountains
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and stuff scroll by, probably the most intricate one is some 3D mushrooms that spring kind
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of just out of nowhere they just grow up out of nowhere and it creates a like a mushroom
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garden and there's a butterfly that flies through and it's animated, that one's really
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cool, that one's a little tough to top, there's some other stuff to these Tetris blocks
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that sort of move around and it's really cool, you just really need to see it, also just
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for fun in the show notes there's, I found just looking up stuff about oscilloscopes, I
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found a guy who figured out how to run video through an oscilloscope screen, I'm sorry I'm
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very very tired, I've been up all night and finally just as an extra little fun thing,
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there's a guy who's actually running Quake through an oscilloscope, I don't ask me how
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he did that, that's really cool, he describes it in the show notes on his video but as with
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a lot of things it's really hard to describe how cool these things are with just an audio
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recording, you really need to be able to see them and if you see them I think you'll
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probably be like me and want to see more, and if you already are into this or you're
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somebody who is also creating a oscilloscope music, it would be great to hear from you,
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I would like to hear more about this, it would be great if you recorded an episode and
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describe in a little bit more detail how it's done, I know that like I said in the original
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video when they were first creating their method of doing it, they were using blender, I
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know that there's some other software that gets used to create the music but it's more
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detail than I could really get into in just a single episode and it's not something
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that I do personally but I found it's really interesting, it's something you should really
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check out, all the links are in the show notes and that's about all I got for you today,
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thanks for listening.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot org, we are a
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community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday, today
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show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up
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