No, seriously, you should be able to get the thing to sing. Although you have to vary pitch and timing simultaneously. Maybe a "singing" voltmeter? It is also possible to speak aleatoric poetry if you setup a table of words and sentence structures. Use a source of uncertainty to select sentence structure, and then the words to plug into it. WHY you would want to do that is another question altogether. Is it art or stupidity? I don't know. I guess it depends on what it says (ha,ha). --- In SynthModules@yahoogroups.com, "djbrow54" <davebr@e...> wrote: > > I just uploaded a SpeakJet voltmeter program. Believe it or not > this was a useful program. I used it to 'calibrate' my four front > panel CV controls. The linearity of the potentiometers is not > perfect so this allows me to characterize what the voltages are at > the various tick marks. It's a lot easier to listen than to send > the data back to the debugger using the terminal. On Start it reads > the voltages at IN-1 thru IN-4 and speak the values. I have it > accurate to two decimal points. It even switches between 'zero' > and 'oh' as in 'zero point oh five' volts. > > OK ... now I nearly am out of ideas for this SpeakJet. I think next > I will have it 'follow' the voltages and indicate where the min > and max transition points occur. I'll see if I can get it to follow > my envelope generators. > > As usual it is in the DBJ programs folder. > > Dave
Message
Re: SpeakJet voltmeter
2005-01-05 by grantrichter2001
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