As a writer and non-programmer (high school Fortran in 1986) who has used out-of-the-box tools such as flash and dreamweaver, I've just begun teaching myself Squeak--which was recommended by a hypertext writer/aquaintence Jim Rosenberg. My interest is in building interactive text / audio projects and live-art-performance tools in a user-defined workspace apart from the constraints/habits associated with Flash and Director, and without the platform dependence and proprietary concerns. I've gathered what seem to be the "classic" beginner texts: Squeak: Learn Programming with Robots, Squeak: A Quick Trip to ObjectLand, and Squeak: Object-Oriented Design with Multimedia Application (Guzdial).
Can anyone speak to the multimedia potential of Squeak and/or its likely development trajectory, especially with regard to audio? The midi tools and synthesis look promising, but as I've mostly worked with recorded voices, I was worried to see no apparent support for compressed audio. Most of my searching in the news-groups has turned up dead-ends, like the tool called "Siren" that is now written for a different smalltalk dialect. I see the Guzdial now seems to be publishing books on Python and Java as "multimedia" languages, and I sense much development work must be going into Croquet.
So in short, can someone with experience using squeak in a multi-media presentational format, especially audio, reassure me that what will be the somewhat steeper learning curve (for a self-taught, non-programmer) will pay off?
Many thanks...
Ken
__________________________________ Kenneth Sherwood, PhD Associate Professor of English Graduate Program in Literature and Criticism 110 Leonard Hall Indiana University of Pennsylvania Indiana, PA 15705 www.sherwoodweb.org _______________________________________________ Beginners mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.squeakfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/beginners |
Kenneth Sherwood wrote:
> As a writer and non-programmer (high school Fortran in 1986) who has > used out-of-the-box tools such as flash and dreamweaver, I've just > begun teaching myself Squeak--which was recommended by a hypertext > writer/aquaintence Jim Rosenberg. My interest is in building > interactive text / audio projects and live-art-performance tools in a > user-defined workspace apart from the constraints/habits associated > with Flash and Director, and without the platform dependence and > proprietary concerns. I've gathered what seem to be the "classic" > beginner texts: Squeak: Learn Programming with Robots, Squeak: A Quick > Trip to ObjectLand, and Squeak: Object-Oriented Design with Multimedia > Application (Guzdial). > Can anyone speak to the multimedia potential of Squeak and/or its > likely development trajectory, especially with regard to audio? The > midi tools and synthesis look promising, but as I've mostly worked > with recorded voices, I was worried to see no apparent support for > compressed audio. Most of my searching in the news-groups has turned > up dead-ends, like the tool called "Siren" that is now written for a > different smalltalk dialect. I see the Guzdial now seems to be > publishing books on Python and Java as "multimedia" languages, and I > sense much development work must be going into Croquet. > > So in short, can someone with experience using squeak in a multi-media > presentational format, especially audio, reassure me that what will be > the somewhat steeper learning curve (for a self-taught, > non-programmer) will pay off? audio files: http://etoys.laptop.org You may also find this project interesting http://www.zogotounga.net/GM/eGM0.html Karl _______________________________________________ Beginners mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.squeakfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/beginners |
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