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  • What happens to Bitcoin if the Nasdaq falls further?Bitcoin eyes a rally toward $92,630 as BTC defends key long-term support while the Nasdaq flashes deeper correction risks.

    Bitcoin eyes a rally toward $92,630 as BTC defends key long-term support while the Nasdaq flashes deeper correction risks.

  • Is this the dawn of the Tokenpocalypse?We're likely to see more price increases as the big AI companies plan to go public.

    We're likely to see more price increases as the big AI companies plan to go public.

  • Bluetooth Gramophone Has Surprisingly Contemporary RootsSo you happen to have a gramaphone– maybe a big old Victrola/HMV, perhaps a Columbia– regardless of brand, it’s a big, beautiful conversation peice for your living room. It might not be the most practical listening device, since isnomuch as there is a vinyl renessance, it’s restricted to vinyl, not the old shellac 78s the these all-mechanical beasts were born for. [JGJMatt] decided to bring his gramophone into the 21st century, turning it into a bluetooth speaker without altering any of its original internals.
    What’s really interesting is that this hack was once a commercial product– sort of. Back in the 1920s when everyone was listening to Jazz, the problem of ‘ what do I do with this massive gramophone cabinet when I’m not cutting a rug?’ was equally valid, and a solution was found: the Dulce-Tone Radio Speaker. A very weak speaker sits under the needle, turning the gramaphone mechanism into an amplifier for the radio. The very same concept, [JGJMatt] would work equally well in the 2020s with a bluetooth signal as in the 1920s with an AM one. There’s no demo video for this project, but you can hear how its 1920s inspiration sounded in the video below.
    The driver for this device is made using a neodymium magnet and the voice coil from a 3W speaker. A 3D-printed needle-holder captures the gramophone’s needle– a much thicker and sturdier thing than the tiny diamond-tip you’d find on a modern turntable, we should note– and holds the magnet to it. The voice coil gets driven via a MH-M38 bluetooth module, and everything is held in a nice 3D-printed case along with the battery.
    The hack is, of course, totally reversible: at any moment, you can remove the needle from this device and drop it on a 78 for some Jazz-era fun, or swap back for 21st century brainrot. If you happen to have some of those old shellac records and a modern turntable, note it takes more than the right RPM to get good sound.

    So you happen to have a gramaphone– maybe a big old Victrola/HMV, perhaps a Columbia– regardless of brand, it’s a big, beautiful conversation peice for your living room. It might …

  • Eli & Flo HiPanHiPan is a free frequency-based panning utility for Windows and macOS. Instead of moving the entire signal left or right, HiPan allows independent panning of low and high frequencies using an adjustable crossover frequency. Typical applications include keeping bass and low-end information centered while positioning higher frequencies elsewhere in the stereo field. Features: • Independent low and high frequency panning • Adjustable crossover frequency • Stereo Spread control • Low Mono mode • Solo monitoring • Lightweight CPU usage • Free forever. Available as: • VST3 for Windows • VST3 for macOS. Audio Unit (AU) support is currently in development and will be added in a future update. Read More

  • Decksaver’s Sping 2026 Drop Decksaver's new collection introduces hard-shell covers for major new releases from a wide range of manufacturers, including Akai, Roland, Behringer, Moog, Dreadbox, Erica Synths, AlphaTheta, Allen & Heath, Native Instruments, Reloop, Ecler, Expressive E, OXI Instruments, Melbourne Instruments and Novation.

    Decksaver's new collection introduces hard-shell covers for major new releases from a wide range of manufacturers, including Akai, Roland, Behringer, Moog, Dreadbox, Erica Synths, AlphaTheta, Allen & Heath, Native Instruments, Reloop, Ecler, Expressive E, OXI Instruments, Melbourne Instruments and Novation.

  • OpenAI unveils Lockdown Mode to protect sensitive data from prompt injection attacksEven with Lockdown Mode, ChatGPT could be still vulnerable to prompt injections, but the goal is to reduce the likelihood that sensitive data gets shared in the process.

    Even with Lockdown Mode, ChatGPT could be still vulnerable to prompt injections, but the goal is to reduce the likelihood that sensitive data gets shared in the process.

  • Pi Pico Puts Bluetooth Keyboards on the I2C BusIf you’ve ever worked with I2C, you know its one of those things that makes working with modern microcontrollers such a pleasure. With a few wires and not many more lines of code, you can communicate with all sorts of hardware such as sensors, displays, and input devices. There are even I2C keyboards out there, although they tend to be a bit pokey — and not in the good way as it pertains to keyboards.
    But the bt2i2c project from [Roberto Alsina] promises to improve things. With his firmware flashed to a Pi Pico W, you can establish a connection with any standard Bluetooth keyboard and have the keystrokes sent over the wire via I2C. As far as your project is concerned, the input will appear to be coming from a BlackBerry BBQ20/BBQ10 keyboard using the address 0x1F, which means that there’s already plenty of code out there to work with. While [Roberto] explains its not strictly necessary, connecting a ST7789 display to the Pi Pico over SPI will give you some visual feedback on connection status.
    As microcontrollers become increasingly powerful and capable of the sort of thing we would once have done on a “real” computer, a project like this has some fascinating potential. We’ve seen a number of “writerdeck” projects running on chips like the ESP32, and it’s not hard to see the appeal of being able to easily pair your favorite Bluetooth keyboard up to one of them.

    If you’ve ever worked with I2C, you know its one of those things that makes working with modern microcontrollers such a pleasure. With a few wires and not many more lines of code, you can com…

  • Bitcoin most oversold since 2020 crash: Can BTC rebound to $70K next?Bitcoin’s latest oversold RSI mirrors 2020 and February 2026 setups that preceded 50% and 30% rebounds, putting $70K back in focus.

  • Umbral Audio AetherAether is an AI co-producer that lives on a track in your session. Instead of clicking every note into a piano roll, you tell it what you want, "a dark, driving minor-key bassline at 124 BPM," or "a warm lo-fi chord progression in F minor," and it plans the part, generates the MIDI, and hands you notes you can drag straight onto a track. Aether reasons about key, scale, voice leading, and rhythm, so the parts it writes sit in your track instead of fighting it. Don't like something? Ask for a change in the next message and it refines the MIDI it already wrote rather than starting over, so you iterate toward the idea in your head. Generate separable Bass, Harmony, and Lead parts on their own MIDI channels, solo or mute any of them, capture and reload earlier takes from the built-in MIDI Library, clean things up in the piano roll, and export multi-track MIDI with tempo and time signature intact. Everything Aether produces is standard, editable MIDI. Aether is bring-your-own-AI. Connect the model you already pay for with your own API key, or run a model locally and generate offline. You own the plugin outright for a one-time price, with no forced subscription. Key features: Text-to-MIDI: generate melodies, chord progressions, basslines, and full multi-track ideas from natural-language prompts. Conversational refinement: follow-up messages edit the MIDI it already wrote. Music-theory-aware phrasing (key, scale, voice leading, rhythm). Separable Bass, Harmony, and Lead parts with per-part solo, mute, and MIDI channels. Drag-to-DAW MIDI and multi-track .mid export with tempo and time signature. MIDI Library with idea and version history. Built-in piano roll, post-processing, MIDI capture, and reusable custom prompts. Supported AI providers Claude (Anthropic), ChatGPT (OpenAI), Gemini (Google), Grok (xAI), DeepSeek, OpenRouter, and Hugging Face via your own API key, or local models through Ollama and LM Studio. Formats and system requirements: Formats: VST3, Audio Unit (AU), and Standalone. OS: macOS and Windows. Runs in Ableton Live, FL Studio, Logic Pro, Cubase, Studio One, Bitwig, Reaper, and other AU/VST3 hosts, or standalone with no DAW. Requires an AI provider API key, or a local model via Ollama / LM Studio; internet connection required for cloud providers. Pricing and licensing One-time purchase of $60. Includes free lifetime updates across Aether 1.x and activation on up to three machines. No subscription required when you use your own API keys. Read More

  • Spitfire Audio bring Originals to Akai MPC Following on from their partnership announcement at NAMM 2026, Spitfire Audio and Akai Pro have announced the release of two new sample libraries that can be run entirely on MPC hardware. 

    Following on from their partnership announcement at NAMM 2026, Spitfire Audio and Akai Pro have announced the release of two new sample libraries that can be run entirely on MPC hardware. 

  • Xilentch releases FREE Xhannel S channel strip plugin
    Xilentch has released Xhannel S, a free channel strip plugin and the first dedicated mixing tool in the XM family. Until now, the XM Series has mostly focused on mastering tools. The first Xilentch plugin I tried was XMLimiter last year, and it quickly became one of my go-to limiters for use across mixes and [...]
    View post: Xilentch releases FREE Xhannel S channel strip plugin

    Xilentch has released Xhannel S, a free channel strip plugin and the first dedicated mixing tool in the XM family. Until now, the XM Series has mostly focused on mastering tools. The first Xilentch plugin I tried was XMLimiter last year, and it quickly became one of my go-to limiters for use across mixes and

  • GearExpo UK: Monitor Update We’ll have monitors of all shapes and sizes at GearExpo UK, so whether you’re looking to upgrade or expand your setup, or searching for your first set of speakers, there’s plenty to check out and take a listen to. 

    We’ll have monitors of all shapes and sizes at GearExpo UK, so whether you’re looking to upgrade or expand your setup, or searching for your first set of speakers, there’s plenty to check out and take a listen to. 

  • Hell Yes Loop Lab releases FREE HYLL Pressure soft clipper plugin
    Hell Yes Loop Lab has released HYLL Pressure, a free/pay-what-you-want soft clipper plugin for macOS and Windows. Does the world really need another soft clipper? Probably not. Definitely not, even. Do I need this soft clipper? I don’t. But that doesn’t mean it isn’t worth a look because, the way I see it, with plugins, [...]
    View post: Hell Yes Loop Lab releases FREE HYLL Pressure soft clipper plugin

    Hell Yes Loop Lab has released HYLL Pressure, a free/pay-what-you-want soft clipper plugin for macOS and Windows. Does the world really need another soft clipper? Probably not. Definitely not, even. Do I need this soft clipper? I don’t. But that doesn’t mean it isn’t worth a look because, the way I see it, with plugins,

  • Sheila Landis & Rick Matle at Ro Cham Beau Detroit, MIWeb: sheilalandis.com Contact: shelandis@gmail.com Players: Sheila Landis, vocals, percussion, kazoo; Rick Matle, 7-string guitar; John Hill, drums

    One of Detroit's newest live jazz music rooms is the sleek and acoustically perfect Ro Cham Beau. The veteran duo of Sheila Landis and Rick Matle recently made their maiden voyage there, one for the books. They were joined by trusty sideman John Hill who embraced their swinging groove like a hand in glove. 

    The evening’s theme was a journey through the decades, taking pages from the Great American Songbook through standard blues and pop. But you quickly realize that nothing by this ensemble is by rote. Each song is meticulously crafted where the ensemble stays faithful to the music’s essence while taking liberties at the same time. 

    First popularized by Eddie Cantor during the heyday of vaudeville, Landis immediately captivates the crowd with the perennial “Makin’ Whoopee.” From the outset, she engaged the audience in joining her on the chorus as she dramatically “talk-sang” the lightly provocative and coquettish lyrics. Matle’s seamless blend of melody and walking bass establishes a comfortable rapport with Hill’s delicate drumming. “It Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing)” was a popular quote and classic from Duke Ellington. It came to life here via Landis’ outrageous kazoo soloing, bongo playing and Hill’s cue to step out. Landis kept a friendly rapport going with the crowd and dedicated the standard “Fly Me to the Moon” to the Artemis II astronauts. With a breathy Billie Holiday quality to her voice the lead chanteuse soared wistfully over a silky Latin rhythm. “The Lady is a Tramp” was appropriately swinging and edgy which transitioned to the sweet and seductive “Besame Mucho.” Hill and Landis provided dense percussion as Matle subtly blended looping chords and deftly placed lead lines. The first set concluded with the perennial upbeat “When You’re Smiling.” Landis’ spirited kazoo honks and Hill’s call and response drumming were a highlight.

    Set two began with the Bacharach/David classic “I’ll Never Fall in Love Again.” It featured Landis on shakers as she supported a smooth samba-like vibe. Matle took some nice solos here as well. Another instrumental piece was the moody and noir-ish “Harlem Nocturne.”

    A devotee of the late great jazz vocalist Betty Carter, Landis evokes that same spirit and charm into everything she does. And you could even include elements of Sarah Vaughan and Nina Simone into her vocal oeuvre as well. Her style blends the sublime with the slightly dramatic and absurd for a performance that is inviting, yet one of a kind. She fuses humor and reflection at the drop of a hat, with all the skill of a Broadway diva. Matle stands alone as one of the best 7-string guitarists on the scene. His ability to blend melody, chords and bass lines simultaneously is a joy to be had. And his encyclopedic trick bag of Wes Montgomery, Jim Hall, Barney Kessel, and Jimi Hendrix-type styles just adds to the versatile nature of their music. John Hill is equally comfortable laying down a solid pocket or adding subtle brush work. 

    Whether they are doing classic cover material or a bevy of their well-crafted original songs, Landis and Matle always deliver and leave you wanting more. 

    The post Sheila Landis & Rick Matle at Ro Cham Beau Detroit, MI first appeared on Music Connection Magazine.

  • Founders share VC horror stories, and some are naming namesA massive viral conversation sharing VC horror stories has taken place this week on X. Some are weird. Some are infuriating.

    A massive viral conversation sharing VC horror stories has taken place this week on X. Some are weird. Some are infuriating.