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hughsung
i'm putting together a massive visual recital and loadbanging a large number of movie clips in order to be able to call them to play quickly. Problem is that the rendering starts to slow down a LOT. Is there any way to clear the memory buffers as old gemheads are turned off and new ones are turned on? Any other speed loading/emptying tips for large multi-clip productions in realtime?
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hughsung
Just got a new HP laptop, hoping that the latest graphics card would help speed up GEM rendering. While picture color quality has improved, speed hasn't. More importantly, one of my favorite effects - the ripple - doesn't seem to work properly anymore. It just jiggles the whole picture around without deforming it like it used to on my old XP machine.
Argh. I feel like i have an expensive Vista paperweight now. Any suggestions on getting my ATI Radeon HD 3200 graphics card to talk nicely to GEM, or tweaking the ripple object to actually ripple? -
hughsung
Ah! Fixed my own problem - not an issue with the graphics card at all! Apparently, to get the watery ripple effect, you have to 'clamp to edge' and/or set the rectangle -texturing via the [pix_texture] object (see the help on this). Playing with these settings gets more of the ripple distortion effect i was looking for.
Whew! Now that vista paperweight has redeemed its value (for now)! -
hughsung
Ok - here's what i've been able to come up with so far, thanks to everyone's help! I used bonk~ and moses to help distinguish loud and soft audio inputs, and then sent the resulting signals to two variations of the sendkeytoapp.vbs scripts. Overall it works well, but i'm noticing a significant delay from PD to the external app.
I'm still trying to get my head around using sendOSC and somehow calling the python version of SendKey directly from within PD - i have the sendOSC apparently successfully opening a socket, but i don't know how to follow through and send keypress text to another application. Any additional help to explore this option would be greatly appreciated! I'm learning so much from everyone here - thanks a million!!
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hughsung
This new vbs app is very, very cool - thanks so much, jon2211! Is there any way to modify this so that the script can accept variable text/strings printed from within PD, instead of a defined text within the vbs script? i'd like to be able to create multiple parameters within PD sending different text strings for different conditions - perhaps sending "A" for a 440 pitch through fiddle~ and then a "C" keystroke if the pitch changes to 523.25 (C above middle A). Sorry for all the hand-holding, this Newbie REALLY appreciates all the help he's getting
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hughsung
argh! so close, and yet so far! i'm using a presentation program called Liquid Media that has the visual programming simplicity of Powerpoint. i was hoping to be able to use PD to trigger assignable keystrokes to activate visual events within Liquid Media...can anyone come up with a simple way to have PD emulate a keyboard? Even if it means rigging up a second computer to "talk" to the other via an ethernet cable? I guess i'm showing my reluctance to dive into GEM, given how complex it looks...
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hughsung
Just to clarify - i'm hoping i can have PD emulate a keyboard with the text outputs. Does that make sense? Is that even possible?
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hughsung
Ok, i can see how substituting the osc~ with adc~ can get PD to recognize A440 when i play it on my piano. Here are a few more questions:
1. How can i get PD to actually print (send the typed characters) to an external application, like Powerpoint?
2. The patch seems to continually send the text string. Is there a way to limit the keystroke repetitions? Perhaps some sort of timing variable requiring a certain amount of time to elapse before "re-firing" the text string?Thanks so much for your help! This is exciting! PD is so cool!
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hughsung
This looks terrific! Can't wait to try it out - can you make another example using volume as a variable instead of pitch? Thank you soooo much!!
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hughsung
Well, i'd like to experiment with live audio options - i'm a collaborative pianist and want to see what kind of effects we can control with various acoustic instrument and vocal ensembles