PublMe bot's Reactions

  • Battle for Control Of The Creator EconomyThe competition for control of the creator economy is intensifying as tech giants build all-encompassing ecosystems designed to lock in creators. Where should creators invest their time and content for long-term success?
    The post Battle for Control Of The Creator Economy appeared first on Hypebot.

    Discover the challenges, opportunities in the battle to control the creator economy. Find out where creators should invest their time

  • How to Legally Cover a Song: A Musician’s Guide to CopyrightLearn how to legally cover songs while respecting copyright and protecting your music career. This guide breaks down essential steps every musician needs to take before releasing a cover song.
    The post How to Legally Cover a Song: A Musician’s Guide to Copyright appeared first on Hypebot.

    Learn how to legally cover songs and protect your music career. Follow these essential steps before releasing your cover song.

  • Trinnov update Nova room-correction hardware The Trinnov Nova has received a significant software update that introduces a new hardware bypass function alongside a range of improvements and enhancements. 

    The Trinnov Nova has received a significant software update that introduces a new hardware bypass function alongside a range of improvements and enhancements. 

  • ADAM Audio H200 headphones are near-perfect for beginners, professionals, and everyone in-between£140 / $150 / €160, adam-audio.com
    Known best for its studio monitors, German brand ADAM Audio entered the headphones market in 2019 with its $550 Studio Pro SP-5. Five years on, another closed-back model has been launched with a more competitive price of $150 and, intriguingly, they come with a companion plugin.
    It’s a crowded market out there, so how do the new H200s fare alongside go-to competitors such as Beyerdynamic’s DT 770 Pro and Austrian Audio’s Hi-X15?

    READ MORE: Sony’s MDR-M1 headphones give ​​a true picture of your mixes and masters

    What features do the ADAM Audio H200s have?
    ADAM’s headphones have a closed-back construction that makes them ideal for recording sessions as they won’t leak headphone spill into nearby microphones as readily as open-backs. And they’re not too bulky, so also won’t look out of place on your daily commute. They aren’t foldable unfortunately, which affects portability and storage, but they do come with a smart drawstring bag. However, once you have listened to them, you’re likely to want to keep them on and use them for all your listening needs.
    The cable is detachable and can connect to the headphones from either side, to suit your dominant hand and particular situation. However, at three metres in length, the provided cable is most suited to recording tasks, where you’re situated a distance away from your desk or audio interface.
    Headphone Utility plugin. Image: Press
    An accompanying Headphone Utility plugin comes in standard AU and VST formats and is best hosted in the control room section of a DAW (if yours has one) or, better still, using a system-wide solution such as the ever-handy SoundSource from Rogue Amoeba.
    The plugin has two main functions. The first is Externalisation, which introduces crossfeed between the left and right channels inside the headphones similar to the way in which we experience music played back on stereo speakers. The left ear hears some sound from the right speaker and vice versa, meaning that panning moves end up appearing less extreme on speakers. Externalisation gives you a far better idea of the differences between how mixes will sound on headphones and speakers, so you can make more informed mixing and mastering decisions without having to have boutique studio monitors in an acoustically treated room.
    Second, a voicing switch offers two different frequency response curves – Pure, and the brand’s own Uniform Natural Response (UNR) – which are designed for critical listening and listening for enjoyment, respectively. Incidentally, the Pure curve is modelled on ADAM’s s3V midfield monitors – here, the combination of externalisation and voicing gets you far closer to the sound of a £5000 studio monitor set-up than you would imagine with a $150 pair of headphones.
    Image: Press
    What are the ADAM Audio H200 headphones like to use?
    The H200s clamp tightly to the head, which provides effective isolation when tracking, but too fierce for casual listening. Hopefully this will ease up over time. Memory foam earcups and headband do lend some comfort and make for a tight seal, which in turn leads to a satisfying, beefy bass response (both of these parts are user-replaceable).
    The long cable irks me. I wouldn’t dare take these headphones out on the street with the stock cable, and I’m in constant fear of entanglement as my errant toddler wanders past me while catching up on work at the dining table. A 1.5-metre cable would have been just right for the majority of users, however, a generic 2.5mm-to-3.5mm cable will work and not break the bank, even if it doesn’t lock into the headset like the one supplied.
    Sonically, there’s a rich bass end and plenty of clarity further up the frequency range, but surprisingly, none of the phasey, cupped phenomenon experienced with other closed-backs. Nor do the H200s have spiky presence peaks built into their voicing. I find them less harsh in the high-mids than the ubiquitous DT 770 Pros (although such a presence peak can be handy for cue mixes), and with a deeper bass extension. And while my daily-driver closed-backs – the Austrian Audio Hi-X15s – require EQ correction due to jagged high-mids, this is not the case with the H200s. You can simply plug them in to track and mix while enjoying supreme sound, whether using the plugin or not.
    Digging into Ninajirachi’s Lapland, there’s a tight punch to the kick patterns and distortion-free sub-bass with clear sustain. There’s not much masking in the busy mid-range of the mix, and there’s a truly immersive stereo image.
    It’s a similar story with Rush’s seminal Tom Sawyer, abound with glorious, tight drum fills and a revealing mid-range that is neither scooped or forced. For a treat, I switch to the alternative, UNR voicing. Extra-velvety tops and a slight mid-range recess result, but the sound isn’t strikingly different from the default Pure voicing. The H200s are supreme for critical mixing tasks as well as listening for enjoyment.
    Working on my own mixes, enabling the Externalisation crossfeed gives me a better sense of how panning decisions will translate to speaker playback. It’s a truly welcome addition, implemented in a no-nonsense, user-friendly way. Sure, plugins such as CanOpener and Realphones are more capable and flexible in simulating loudspeaker listening (Realphones takes this and room simulation to a whole new level), but ADAM’s plugin is lightweight and efficient, free of tantalising options that could potentially distract me from serious work.
    Image: Press
    Who should buy ADAM Audio H200 headphones?
    If you’re not fazed by clamping force, the clumsily-long stock cable, or a lack of foldability, ADAM Audio’s H200s ought to be a serious contender on your studio headphone shortlist. In fact, they sound every bit as pleasing as competing closed-back models priced over $100 more, and have lower levels of measured distortion than just about any other headphones at any price.
    This is all without taking into account the extras offered by the plugin. Crossfeed helps you make more reliable mixing decisions away from studio monitors, while voicing changes is an unexpected bonus. All processes are handled in moderation, free of stark differences that would otherwise cause the headphones to lose their impressive inherent sonic signature.
    Save for a couple of wonky design decisions, ADAM Audio has a real winner on its hands with the H200s. I’ll be bereft when these leave my desk.

    Key features

    Closed-back, over-ear headphones
    Plugin for crossfeed and voicing options (AU/VST)
    40-mm Polyether Ether Ketone (PEEK) dynamic drivers
    2 Hz – 23.5 kHz frequency range
    32 Ohms
    Memory foam, leatherette-covered earcups
    User-replaceable earcups and headband pad
    Comes with 3-metre detachable cable, jack adapter and carrying pouch

    At $150, how do the ADAM Audio H200 headphones fare alongside go-to competitors? Read the review to find out

  • Jerry Cantrell says streaming is a “bad business model”Streaming services have billions of users worldwide, so there’s no denying their success from a listener standpoint. But what about for the artists whose music is their lifeblood? Well, in the words of Alice in Chains’ Jerry Cantrell, from this perspective, streaming is a “bad business model”.
    Speaking to Primordial Radio [transcribed by Blabbermouth], the guitarist explains that while streaming is cutting into artist earnings, it is simply an “intensified” version of the model the music industry has operated on for years.

    READ MORE: Pete Townshend says “somebody needs to occasionally slap Rick Rubin”: “One minute he’s telling us to do whatever we like and the next he’s telling us we mustn’t do this”

    “The music business really wasn’t set up in a very equitable way,” he says. “It was kind of predatory loans to bands that you paid back at 75 cents on the dollar.
    “And as far as keeping your publishing, that was a real battle and very few artists did that. The new model has taken that and kind of intensified it a bit. I was looking at – I can’t remember the artist – but I was looking at something that gets millions and millions of streams or whatever, and people are being paid 1000th of a cent every time it’s played.
    “In the old days, when you got played on the radio, that turned into like a penny or something then, and that adds up. I’m a real advocate for artists’ rights, man.”
    He goes on: “The new model of the streaming platform has really taken the old model of really being a small cut to the artist and made it really even smaller. So the prices to do business – rent a bus, gas, fuel, salaries, travel – they all continue to go up and the income continues to go down for artists of all sizes now.
    “It’s a bad business model. It would be nice to see it a little bit fairer toward the artist. The landscape is always moving, the clock is always running and you can count on the fact that it’s changing.”
    The post Jerry Cantrell says streaming is a “bad business model” appeared first on MusicTech.

    The guitarist explains that while streaming is cutting into artist earnings, it is simply an “intensified” version of the model the music industry has operated on for years.

  • VSL introduce Duality Strings Essentials VSL have announced an entry-level version of Duality Strings, a free choir library and a series of limited-time promotional offers.

    VSL have announced an entry-level version of Duality Strings, a free choir library and a series of limited-time promotional offers.

  • Alissia (Bruno Mars, Kaytranada) makes a track in Studio One for the first time
    World-renowned producer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist Alissia creates a track in Studio One for the first time.

    World-renowned producer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist Alissia creates a track in Studio One for the first time.

  • WalletConnect Foundation and Reown establish UX standards framework"We are always looking for feedback and ways to improve WalletConnect," Foundation director Pedro Gomes told Cointelegraph.

  • Building a Motor Feed For the UE1 Vacuum Tube Computer’s Paper Tape ReaderBuilding a paper tape reader by itself isn’t super complicated: you need a source of light, some photoreceptors behind the tape to register the presence of holes and some way to pull the tape through the reader at a reasonable rate. This latter part can get somewhat tricky, as Usagi Electric‘s [David Lovett] discovered while adding this feature to his vacuum tube-era DIY reader. This follows on what now seems like a fairly simple aspect of the photosensors and building a way to position said photosensors near the paper tape.
    As the feed rate of the paper tape is tied to the reading speed, and in the case of [David]’s also contains the clock for the custom tube-based UE1 computer, it determines many of the requirements. With 8 bits per line, the tape forms the ROM for the system, all of which has to be executed and used immediately when read, as there is no RAM to load instructions into. This also necessitates the need to run the tape as an endless loop, to enable ‘jumping’ between parts of this paper-based ROM by simple masking off parts of the code until the desired address is reached.
    For the motor a slot car motor plus speed-reduction gear was chosen, with a design to hold these then designed in FreeCAD. Courtesy of his brother’s hobby machine shop and a CAD professional’s help, producing these parts was very easy, followed by final assembly. Guides were added for the tape, not unlike with a cassette player, which allowed the tape to be pulled through smoothly. Next up is wiring up the photodiodes, after which theoretically the UE1 can roar into action directly running programs off paper tape.

    Building a paper tape reader by itself isn’t super complicated: you need a source of light, some photoreceptors behind the tape to register the presence of holes and some way to pull the tape…

  • Component Tester TeardownIn the modern age, when you hear “component tester” you probably think of one of those cheap microcontroller-based devices that can identify components and provide basic measurements on an LCD screen. However, in the past, these were usually simple circuits that generated an XY scope plot. The trace would allow an experienced operator to identify components and read a few key parameters. [Thomas] tears down an old Hameg device that uses this principle in the video below.
    The unit is in a nice enclosure and has a feature that controls the amount of current the unit uses in the excitation signal. It plugs into the wall, and you can connect the component under test with either test leads or a socket. The output, of course, is a pair of BNCs for the scope’s X and Y inputs.

    Compared to some homebrew projects that are similar, the PCB inside the device seems more complex. The output of most devices like this uses the line frequency (50 or 60 Hz). This one, however, has its own drive oscillator that operates at a different frequency.
    Each type of component has a tell-tale trace on the scope. We found the tunnel diode trace especially interesting. Capacitors are circles, diodes make a definite step shape. There’s a table from the manual near the end of the video.
    Most of these devices are much simpler, using a transformer to generate the AC sweep and a simple mechanism to measure the current. That makes them quite easy to build and they are still surprisingly useful.

    In the modern age, when you hear “component tester” you probably think of one of those cheap microcontroller-based devices that can identify components and provide basic measurements on…

  • Bill Ackman wants to move Universal Music Group’s financial HQ from Amsterdam to the US. Universal has warned it might not be possible.World's largest music rights company and activist investor could be headed for a disagreement
    Source

  • IK Multimedia offers FREE Black 76 FET and Saturator-X for AmpliTube 5 CS
    New month, new gear, baby! The guitar goblins at IK Multimedia have again blessed us with a new monthly giveaway for AmpliTube 5 CS, and this time, it’s for a pair of rack FX modules: Black 76 FET and Saturator-X.  Throughout November, the company will be giving away the Black 76 FET compressor/limiter and Saturator-X [...]
    View post: IK Multimedia offers FREE Black 76 FET and Saturator-X for AmpliTube 5 CS

    New month, new gear, baby! The guitar goblins at IK Multimedia have again blessed us with a new monthly giveaway for AmpliTube 5 CS, and this time, it’s for a pair of rack FX modules: Black 76 FET and Saturator-X.  Throughout November, the company will be giving away the Black 76 FET compressor/limiter and Saturator-X

  • SRM Sounds launch free Dark Mode piano Dark Mode processing some of the samples used to create Max Richter Piano with a range of filters and EQs to create an even softer-sounding instrument.

    Dark Mode processing some of the samples used to create Max Richter Piano with a range of filters and EQs to create an even softer-sounding instrument.

  • Mozilla lays off 30% of its nonprofit armWelcome back to Week in Review. This week, we’re unpacking the latest layoffs at Mozilla, Perplexity offering to cross a picket line, and Apple warning investors that it might never top the iPhone. Let’s get into it. The Mozilla Foundation laid off 30% of its employees in the second round of layoffs for the Firefox […]
    © 2024 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.

    Welcome back to Week in Review. This week, we’re unpacking the latest layoffs at Mozilla, Perplexity offering to cross a picket line, and Apple warning

  • All Aboard The Good Ship BenchyWe’ll go out on a limb here and say that a large portion of Hackaday readers are also boat-builders. That’s a bold statement, but as the term applies to anyone who has built a boat, we’d argue that it encompasses anyone who’s run off a Benchy, the popular 3D printer test model. Among all you newfound mariners, certainly a significant number must have looked at their Benchy and wondered what a full-sized one would be like. Those daydreams of being captain of your ship may not have been realized, but [Dr. D-Flo] has made them a reality for himself with what he claims is the world’s largest Benchy. It floats, and carries him down the waterways of Tennessee in style!
    The video below is long but has all the details. The three sections of the boat were printed in PETG on a printer with a one cubic meter build volume, and a few liberties had to be taken with the design to ensure it can be used as a real boat. The infill gaps are filled with expanding foam to provide extra buoyancy, and an aluminium plate is attached to the bottom for strength. The keel meanwhile is a 3D printed sectional mold filled with concrete. The cabin is printed in PETG again, and with the addition of controls and a solar powered trolling motor, the vessel is ready to go. Let’s face it, we all want a try!

    We’ll go out on a limb here and say that a large portion of Hackaday readers are also boat-builders. That’s a bold statement, but as the term applies to anyone who has built a boat, we&…