you are 100% right - any MP# player would do the job. The smaller ones could eve reside behind the panel out of view - especially if you really hacked up the buttons etc. I just like the screen etc. giving back feedback but any other player would be fine. -James --- In Doepfer_a100@yahoogroups.com, "Silas Johansen" <sijodk@...> wrote: > > Does it have to be an iPod? With the fancy controls in modern iPods it's > probably not worth the trouble hacking them when you can get inexpensive > noname mp3 players with normal pushbuttons that could be hacked in the way > you describe with relatively little effort. Sure, you might already have > iPods galore lying around, but we're talking a lot less than the cost of a > module if you can live with "only" a gigabyte - more than enough for hours > of live performance, even if you run it constantly. > > But I must say I really like your module idea - I might implement it or > something similar with a non-iPod player. > > Cheers, > > Silas > > On 7/3/07, ersatzplanet <the_ersatz_planet@...> wrote: > > > > I had an idea for a wacky module yesterday and thought I would share it. > > Maybe a person > > with better electronic chops than me can make one. > > I offten play with ambient sound backgrounds. I used to use a reel-to-reel > > with custom > > tape loops, then a Tascam Porastudio, and now a retired iPod. I have a > > bunch of them that > > were given to me by co-workers when they broke. A new hard drive and they > > work fine. My > > girlfriend just got a iPod Nano and the thing is so small and compact that > > I thought one > > would be great mounted to a panel on my modular. Connect the dock cable to > > give it > > power and get the audio from it. Then the good part - control it through > > the connector > > too. I see having just the basic controls made CV-able. Have a trigger in > > that does the > > previous song selection, a trigger for the next song selection, and both a > > trigger that > > toggles play/pause and a gate in that plays on the gate high. The iPod > > controls are serial > > in the latest units so that's the circuitry I can't hack but I have an > > older iPod from when > > they used the remote control/headphone connector and I may try just > > "pushing it's > > buttons" via a electronic switch module. Worth a try. The older hard drive > > iPods don't react > > super fast but the flash based units are pretty snappy. it would be fun > > for timed sound > > effects or ambient noises. I'm sure Doepfer would not be interested in > > making one, but I > > sure would love to have one. > > For those with the chops here is a site that has the pinouts for the > > connector and a brief > > discription of the serial protocol used in the remotes: > > http://pinouts.ru/PortableDevices/ipod_pinout.shtml > > I can see it as a panel with the nano clipped to it and a connector cable > > rinning into the > > panel and 6 jacks below - 4 control ins and 2 audio outs. > > -James > > > > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] >
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Re: Wacky idea for a module...
2007-07-03 by ersatzplanet
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