Wednesday 22 October 2014

 Subscribe SIGN IN Home U.S. Politics World Business Tech Health Science Entertainment Newsfeed Living Sports History Magazine Ideas Money LIFE Photography Videos ABOVE AND BEYOND BIZ TECH TIPS DATA SECURITY NEW ENERGY REALITY NEXT GENERATION LEADERS RETIREMENT REDEFINED TIME 100 TIME EXPLAINS TOP OF THE WORLD SUBSCRIBE NEWSLETTERS FEEDBACK PRIVACY POLICY YOUR CALIFORNIA PRIVACY RIGHTS TERMS OF USE AD CHOICES  RSS TIME APPS TIME FOR KIDS MEDIA KIT ADVERTISING REPRINTS AND PERMISSIONS SITE MAP HELP CUSTOMER SERVICE © 2014 TIME INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Hong Kong  WORLD HONG KONG The Main Hong Kong Protest Site Is a Perfect Anarchist Collective Elizabeth Barber / Hong Kong Oct. 20, 2014  Members of the Occupied movement rest in their tents on a highway blocked by protestor barricades in the Admiralty district of Hong Kong on October 16, 2014. ANTHONY WALLACE—AFP/Getty Images There are no leaders, but everything, from the supply tents to the recycling stations, runs just beautifully RECOMMENDED FOR YOU UVA Student's Body is Found A Tourists Guide to the Hong Kong Protests Hong Kong Students Rally by Taboola Billy Fong is out of a job. MORE Kenny G Assures China That He Has No Opinion on the Hong Kong Protests Kenny G Went to the Hong Kong Protests and Beijing Is Not Happy Canadian Prime Minister Calls Ottawa Gunman 'Terrorist' NBC News 'High-Risk Traveler': Who Is the Canadian Parliament Shooter? NBC News 'Strength Coming Back': NBC News Freelancer Speaks Out NBC News Until recently, this high school student had found a purpose helping Hong Kong’s demonstrators over the high median dividers cutting through their encampment in the city’s Admiralty district. POPULAR AMONG SUBSCRIBERS  The Reinventions of Rand Paul Subscribe The New Face of Indonesian Democracy Meet the New Leader of the Fourth-Largest Country in the World Yet, as the occupation of Harcourt Road enters its fourth week, getting over the concrete walls has become easy: protesters handy with tools have made several sets of wooden stairs for them, complete with handrails. “I have somehow become useless,” says Fong, 17, standing idly at one such set of steps on a recent evening. “But it’s okay,” he said, shrugging his shoulders. “Now I have more leisure time.” Call Fong’s job a casualty of this protest’s maturation from an uncertain settlement to a bona fide village—a transformation that smacks of pure anarchism. Not anarchy, meaning chaos, but classical political anarchism: a self-organizing community that has no leader. Protesters in Hong Kong share a common goal of getting Beijing to agree to free elections for the Hong Kong government’s top job in 2017 (at the moment, Beijing is insisting on screening candidates). But no one is fully in charge of these demonstrations, and protesters are split over how to get their demand answered. A lack of leadership is widely cited as one reason why the conflict has not come to a resolution. Yet leaderlessness has not stopped Hong Kong demonstrators from achieving social consensus at their biggest protest site in skyscraper-hemmed Harcourt Road (or Umbrella Square, as the protesters now call it). These days, the six-lane thoroughfare turned tent community is a microcosm of the city that hosts it except for one detail: it does not have a chief executive, as Hong Kong’s leader is called. “We don’t have a central command to do anything,” says Daris Wong, 30, a paralegal manning a Cantonese-English interpretation booth, the latest in his string of self-appointed protest gigs. “It’s maybe the not so good thing about these protests,” he says, “but it’s also the most beautiful thing.” Over the past few days, Harcourt Road has acquired suburbs of camping tents. Most tents have numbers. Some are recognized addresses. A letter was recently delivered by the Hong Kong Post Office to tent 22, according to the Democratic Party’s Facebook page. Protesters need not bring their own accommodation. Last Friday, Pat, a freelance graphic designer who declined to give her last name, opened registration at 8:30 p.m. for 67 tents donated to the supplies station she helps run. The assembled tents are called the Freedom Quarter, she said, handing a young couple waiting in line a list of rules: cleanliness is a must; checkout time is noon on Saturday. Protesters bedding-in will find their stay clean, if not necessarily comfortable. Do-gooders ensure that public restrooms around the site are stocked with a mind-boggling assortment of toiletries, from face moisturizer to conditioning shampoo, many of them designer brands. Student volunteers mop out the facilities too, because the municipal cleaners can’t keep pace with the high numbers of people passing through the washrooms every day. Roving trash collectors meanwhile bring waste to designated recycling areas, where the items are sorted and carted out to the city’s trash-collection stations. “I saw that it wasn’t being done, and someone has to do it,” says Henry Ip, 23, a college student making one of his twice-daily rounds through the site with a plastic trash bag.  Meanwhile, supply tents — there are several around Harcourt Road — have become bursting emporiums of water, towels, face masks, Oreo cookies and McDonalds takeout. “It’s messy because I just got here,” says Isaac Hung, 24, a law student who works an informal day shift at one such station, gesturing to a sprawl of snacks and medical supplies. “Every shift, I fix it, and then I come back, and it’s all messy again.” Hung’s supplies tent has two couches, mats that suffice as carpeting, and lighting fashioned from flashlights and saline solution bottles. A walkie-talkie on the floor crackles insistently. Supply stations use them to call on each other if one runs out of something Conservation and consideration rule this camp. Wong, the paralegal, says he often tries to pass out lunchboxes to protesters, only to be turned down: “They say, ‘Save it for someone who needs it more,’” Wong says. “So then I say, ‘O.K., but if you don’t take it, I will give it to the police,’” he adds. “Then, they take it.” As he speaks, students sitting in a sprawling study zone that the protesters have outfitted with desks, lamps, and power outlets, politely decline a volunteer stooping to offer them tiny cakes. Like any village, this one also has its resident oddballs. One taciturn protester, wearing a skull-print ski mask pulled up to his eyes, passes plastic cups of soup to passerby. Glass bottles of beer bob inside in his big blue cooler. His area, furnished with a vase of sunflowers, is just one photographic opportunity for visitors wandering the protest village. Art abounds, much of it inspired by the umbrellas that became the symbol of the movement after protesters used them to shield themselves from police pepper spray. There’s a tall statue of a figure holding out an umbrella that’s become the subject of countless Instagrams. A short distance away are exhibitions of photography and ink drawings. Tourists love to gather for photos in front of a long staircase leading up to the Central Government Offices that has become plastered with thousands of brightly colored Post-It notes, each bearing a message of support for the protesters. It’s been christened the Lennon Wall. Not that life is always colorful here. Prominent pro-democracy figures — in fact anyone with something to say — give frequent lectures to considerable crowds, but “sometimes people get tired of public speeches,” says Ivy Chan, 40, a staffer for a Labor Party legislator and the organizer of nightly documentary screenings. She briefly interrupted a Friday night showing to let the sleepy-looking, supine crowd know she had found someone’s heart disease pills. Meanwhile, a group of law students manning a tent for legal discussions were finding the hoped-for debates stymied by general agreement among those who stopped in. As Tilly Chow, 19, put it, “the people who are really against us aren’t here, and they don’t want to know what we have to say.” By midnight, the collective had drawn its tent door closed to discuss boiling a 60-something page legal analysis of the situation into something more concise. Elsewhere, tents were faintly lit with the glow of Facebook’s smartphone app. A young man took a photo on his iPad of a young woman popping her head out of their newly erected tent and waited as she approved the pictures. Many people were already asleep, or at least trying. Protesters, weathering criticism from conservative Hong Kongers and business owners tired of protests clogging major traffic arteries, have emphasized that this demonstration is not a jubilant sleepover. A sign posted in the main encampment reads: “Not a Party, is a Protest.” Indeed, as midnight neared, three young women paused at a quiet, unclaimed plot of pavement and began unspooling tarp from a bag, looking anything but party-ready. “This is not fun,” says Tracy Leung, 28, who works for a retail chain, holding a corner of the rumpled canvas, which she hoped would eventually be a tent, but did not yet look like one. “No one likes to sleep on the street,” added her colleague, Carol Lee, 26. But they had a critical role to play in this village, the three friends said. “I’m here as one more body,” said Leung. “Because for every one less body here, it gets more dangerous for everyone else.”


Rare Helmholtz Sound Synthesizer Auctioned For $20K
Published on October 22nd, 2014
Written by: synthhead
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helmholz-synthesizer

Last month, we shared news about a rare Helmholtz Sound Synthesizer that was up for auction.

The Helmholtz Sound Synthesizer is considered by some to be the first electronic synthesizer. It uses tuning forks, controlled by electromagnets, to generate fundamentals and overtones, the intensity of which can be varied to create different types of sounds. While it was a synthesizer, it was more a scientific instrument than a musical one.

The Helmholtz Sound Synthesizer above, built around 1905, sold today for US $20,000.

Helmholtz used his system to identify the frequencies of the pure sine wave components of complex sounds, demonstrating that the different combinations made could reproduce vocal sounds.

This particular (scientific) instrument was built by Max Kohl of Chemnitz – who, according to Bonhams, was one of the more respected scientific instrument makers of the late 19th and early 20th centuries

Wednesday 15 October 2014

Mackie DL32R goes fully wireless


Boasts stagebox design and multi-track recording to USB drive

Since their introduction, over two million shows have been mixed on Mackie’s DL-series mixers. Now, with their latest model, the company are taking the wireless mixer concept in a slightly different direction. The Mackie DL32R is a 32-in, 14-out, 3U rackmountable stagebox and mixer with full wireless control via iPad, but no dock. Designed for use at larger venues, the DL32R gives the engineer remote control over everything, including the 32 recallable Onyx+ mic preamps which Senior Mackie Product Manager Ben Olswang calls the company’s “best pre ever”. Based on the company’s Onyx preamp design, the Onyx+ offers better noise performance and a flatter frequency response and, importantly, it doesn’t make any clicks or pops when changing gain.
In addition to the 14 fully assignable XLR outputs, the DL32R sports stereo AES digital outputs and a Dante expansion card slot for adding more physical outputs.


A much-requested feature is the ability to record and play back multi-channel audio. On launch, the hardware will support 24-in, 24-out recording/playback to a USB 2 hard drive, with the channel count increasing to 32 ins and outs post-launch. Wireless control over playback and recording opens the door for virtual soundchecks and multitrack show recordings. This, combined with support for up to 10 simultaneous iOS device connections, allows complex setups. For example, musicians can trigger backing tracks from an iPad while the FOH engineer controls recording and playback independently. Unlike many competitors, all of this can be achieved directly from the iPad. The DL32R also doubles as a 32-in, 32-out recording interface for Mac and PC.
The DSP engine provides 36 input channels (32 ins and four returns) all with full channel processing, 28 output buses, and three stereo effects processors. Notably, the mixer engine also allows A/B sources, letting you switch to a backup mic on the same channel if disaster strikes.
All DL-series users can benefit from the latest version of the Master Fader control app, which adds an overview mode for monitoring all channels without scrolling.


The DL32R is set to only cost £1749 — a reasonable price given the number of on-board preamps and the portability factor. It should be available in October.