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a faster hnsearchPricing:
- Open Source
For starters, this submission is about learning synthesizers, while ngrid (according to adamnemecek at least) is about music composition. Two different areas in music. Usually when people self-promote here on HN, it's closely related to the topic at hand, and people explain how it's related to or better than the submission. When adamnemecek promotes his ngrid project, he does no such thing and instead writes something like "I've been working on an IDE for music composition, launching in X months/weeks <insert link>" without describing it more, seems like they are just trying to get more clicks to their projects page. Probably works too, otherwise they wouldn't continue doing so. And finally, anyone who have been reading comments on music-related submissions here on HN for the last 4 years (yeah, really! Take a look at https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&query=ngrid.io&sort=byDate&type=comment and go to the last page!) have seen ngrid being mentioned by adamnemecek on basically every single music-related submission. There is a time and place for posting your own projects. Doing it on every submission that is slightly related to your projects theme is not that.
#Search Engine #Web Search #Internet Search 1908 social mentions
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Make music with a free, cross-platform toolPricing:
- Open Source
#Audio & Music #Music #Music Tools 96 social mentions
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A cross-platform modular synthesizer.Pricing:
- Open Source
If you're going with software eurorack emulations as a didactic tool, VCV rack should be pointed out, too. The standalone version is open source: https://vcvrack.com The basic modules that are included let you form the core of subtractive synthesis. Having them available as isolated, wired up building blocks is a very visual help in understanding how they relate.
#3D #Music Generation #Prototyping Tools 112 social mentions