On Wed, 18 May, 2005 at 10:54AM +1000, Mark Constable spake thus: > On Wednesday 18 May 2005 05:42, james@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > > > Very very nice. I especially like the beats. How'd you make them, and > > > any chance of sharing the... uh... sources? My drum programming skills > > > are teh sukc, and chicks only like guys with good skills. > > > > No problem. I'm a tracker junkie, so you might not like the format, > > but mail me back if you're interested. You can have the whole file > > and play with it - see what you come up with from the same sounds. > > > > In fact, that would make a great exercise. How about we all work from > > a common set of sounds and produce a track, and see how they compare? > > We could host them all in one place as a kind of project. It would be > > great to see what other people did and how they did it. > > > > Who's up for that? > > http://opensrc.org has been available for this kind of thing for > years. There are 3 "Local Projects" so far with absolutely the > simplest kind of interface so that web presentation does not get > in the way. > > There is also http://freepats.opensrc.org, an area specifically > for patches, soundfonts and samples. > > No registration other than asking for an upload password (can't > have nasty folks uploading wares and abusing the space), no BS > hidden links that can't be easily linked to, no extra page editing > required to present uploaded material as uploads appear instantly, > a Wiki on the same database as alsa.opensrc.org so any simple > WikiLink references in howtos to other ALSA material just work. > Ta! I'll take a look. -- "I'd crawl over an acre of 'Visual This++' and 'Integrated Development That' to get to gcc, Emacs, and gdb. Thank you." (By Vance Petree, Virginia Power)