Das ist eine ziemlich abgefahrene Geschichte: Brendan Chilcutt betreibt ein Online Sound Museum, in dem er z.B. den Sound eines Modems beim Verbindungsaufbau oder das Geräusch eines Tamagotchi ausstellt, damit diese nicht in Vergessenheit geraten. Schön ist auch der Start eines Windows 95 Rechners oder eines VHS Kassettenrekorders beim Einlegen des Bandes.
Das ist schon mal toll und lustig, interessant ist aber sein 10 Jahres Plan: Drei Jahre will er noch Töne sammeln und bereitstellen, die nächsten 7 Jahre für die Entwicklung einer Markup Language verwenden, um die Töne als Komposition im Binärcode ablegen zu können.
ABGEFAHREN :-))). Hier geht's ins Museum.
Brendan Chilcutt:
"I launched the site in January of 2012 as a way to preserve the sounds made famous by my favorite old technologies and electronics equipment. For instance, the textured rattle and hum of a VHS tape being sucked into the womb of a 1983 JVC HR-7100 VCR. As you probably know, it's a wonderfully complex sound, subtle yet unfiltered. But, as streaming playback becomes more common in the US, and as people in developing nations like Canada and the UK get brought up to DVD players, it's likely that the world will have seen and heard the last of older machines like the HR-7100. And as new products comes to market, we stand to lose much more than VCRs.
Imagine a world where we never again hear the symphonic startup of a Windows 95 machine. Imagine generations of children unacquainted with the chattering of angels lodged deep within the recesses of an old cathode ray tube TV.
My ten-year plan is to complete the data collection phase by the year 2015, and spend the next seven years developing the proper markup language to reinterpret the sounds as a binary composition.
If you don't understand my passion and the significance of my work, you probably never will. But if you do, then you've come to the right place."
Fantastic site :-) brilliant idea :-)) perfect plan :-)))
via boingboing.
Das ist schon mal toll und lustig, interessant ist aber sein 10 Jahres Plan: Drei Jahre will er noch Töne sammeln und bereitstellen, die nächsten 7 Jahre für die Entwicklung einer Markup Language verwenden, um die Töne als Komposition im Binärcode ablegen zu können.
ABGEFAHREN :-))). Hier geht's ins Museum.
Brendan Chilcutt:
"I launched the site in January of 2012 as a way to preserve the sounds made famous by my favorite old technologies and electronics equipment. For instance, the textured rattle and hum of a VHS tape being sucked into the womb of a 1983 JVC HR-7100 VCR. As you probably know, it's a wonderfully complex sound, subtle yet unfiltered. But, as streaming playback becomes more common in the US, and as people in developing nations like Canada and the UK get brought up to DVD players, it's likely that the world will have seen and heard the last of older machines like the HR-7100. And as new products comes to market, we stand to lose much more than VCRs.
Imagine a world where we never again hear the symphonic startup of a Windows 95 machine. Imagine generations of children unacquainted with the chattering of angels lodged deep within the recesses of an old cathode ray tube TV.
My ten-year plan is to complete the data collection phase by the year 2015, and spend the next seven years developing the proper markup language to reinterpret the sounds as a binary composition.
If you don't understand my passion and the significance of my work, you probably never will. But if you do, then you've come to the right place."
Fantastic site :-) brilliant idea :-)) perfect plan :-)))
via boingboing.