brain patches graphics cross channel to tune to students needs

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brain patches graphics cross channel to tune to students needs

Paul Sheldon-2
In my computer club, the webmaster set me onto a friend of his that was
interested in visualising music.

I am intensely interested in how graphics can help me understand and
share ideas, because I have "failed" at symbolic reasoning in graduate
level mathematics. Actually, I use different brain patches than them to
get to symbolic reasoning, just like Kay movied on the part two of the
movie after the google movie, "Doing with Images Makes Symbols". Sorry,
I don't recall the link or how I ferretted it out.

While someone on this list mentioned a genetic algorithm for getting
compositions from different minds together without those minds
necessarily getting along in a band, the idea of cross-channeling to
avoid brain patch interference by visualizing music might get one mind
to work together, even though it might never get together in a band.

So, in summary, I need leads on this cross-channeling to visualize music
for a friend of a friend. World visualising rabbits want to know.

;-)
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Re: brain patches graphics cross channel to tune to students needs

Bert Freudenberg

On May 28, 2007, at 17:53 , Paul Sheldon wrote:

> In my computer club, the webmaster set me onto a friend of his that  
> was interested in visualising music.
>
> I am intensely interested in how graphics can help me understand  
> and share ideas, because I have "failed" at symbolic reasoning in  
> graduate level mathematics. Actually, I use different brain patches  
> than them to get to symbolic reasoning, just like Kay movied on the  
> part two of the movie after the google movie, "Doing with Images  
> Makes Symbols". Sorry, I don't recall the link or how I ferretted  
> it out.
>
> While someone on this list mentioned a genetic algorithm for  
> getting compositions from different minds together without those  
> minds necessarily getting along in a band, the idea of cross-
> channeling to avoid brain patch interference by visualizing music  
> might get one mind to work together, even though it might never get  
> together in a band.
>
> So, in summary, I need leads on this cross-channeling to visualize  
> music for a friend of a friend. World visualising rabbits want to  
> know.

Not Croquet, but Squeak and Balloon3D:

http://www.cs.montana.edu/techreports/2004/ProjectMain.pdf


- Bert -