Its quite remarkable watching this level of manifestation of the Dunning-Kruger effect combine itself with so much naively misplaced condescension.chilly7 wrote:Thank u Urs. I will cheak that stuff. I just downloaded a demo.
P.s.
1) But no metter how far u claimbed a hill, do not stop and sey i am a king, just move higher and fester as if u did nothing!!!
2) Quality is first quanity is only if u make no compromise with quality!!!
Is there really anything new in digital world which was never existed before?!!
- Beware the Quoth
- 35518 posts since 4 Sep, 2001 from R'lyeh Oceanic Amusement Park and Funfair
An idiot on Set Theory:
"In some cases there is an object called red that contains everything that is red. In much the same way a pot is a plate."
"In some cases there is an object called red that contains everything that is red. In much the same way a pot is a plate."
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- KVRist
- 229 posts since 1 Feb, 2013 from United States
If you could represent sound as something other than a waveform, then yeah maybe you're on to something. But with the way physics tends to work, sound being the compression/expansion of air, I don't know that there's really a way around it. If you could translate a picture of a pig into sound for example, that might actually be pretty cool.
- KVRian
- 1339 posts since 25 Sep, 2011 from New York
I wish Q was here...BBFG# wrote:That's more relative to Planck's Constant than Paradoxical Entanglement.
But at least you can add a wobble knob without tearing the continuum.
Reality is a Condition due to Lack of Weed!
- KVRAF
- 6467 posts since 18 Jul, 2008 from New York
When you "simulate a virtual world," do you get a virtual virtual world?Sendy wrote:Why don't we simulate a virtual world, then create sound by reading atoms along certain lines in spacetime in that world to decide whether the waveform should go up, down, or stay the same.
Could sound exist in a virtual world? If a tree falls in a forest...
- KVRian
- 868 posts since 2 Jan, 2013
whyterabbyt wrote:Its quite remarkable watching this level of manifestation of the Dunning-Kruger effect combine itself with so much naively misplaced condescension.
- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 694 posts since 8 Apr, 2012 from planet Earth
Thank u i will take a look.
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- KVRAF
- 9146 posts since 28 Apr, 2013
It's a quirky little thing that seems worth the price for something interesting. But I wonder why the sounds cost more than the synth itself?chilly7 wrote:Thank u i will take a look.
- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 694 posts since 8 Apr, 2012 from planet Earth
Why u ask me?!BBFG# wrote:It's a quirky little thing that seems worth the price for something interesting. But I wonder why the sounds cost more than the synth itself?chilly7 wrote:Thank u i will take a look.
U should ask developers, and let us know.
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- KVRAF
- 9146 posts since 28 Apr, 2013
Just because you were in the conversation doesn't mean it was directed at you specifically. Or in fact, was anything more than rhetorical. Take it as personally as you feel you need to. But no, I wasn't asking you, because I know fully well it was nothing you could answer or even needed answering.chilly7 wrote:Why u ask me?!BBFG# wrote:It's a quirky little thing that seems worth the price for something interesting. But I wonder why the sounds cost more than the synth itself?chilly7 wrote:Thank u i will take a look.BasariStudios wrote:http://www.eisenberg-audio.de/einklang
Try that.![]()
U should ask developers, and let us know.
- KVRAF
- 5223 posts since 20 Jul, 2010
If you do it well enough, yes - the simulated people would eventually start to create and run simulations, creating an endless infinite regress of simulations.Frantz wrote:When you "simulate a virtual world," do you get a virtual virtual world?Sendy wrote:Why don't we simulate a virtual world, then create sound by reading atoms along certain lines in spacetime in that world to decide whether the waveform should go up, down, or stay the same.
Could sound exist in a virtual world? If a tree falls in a forest...
Would sound in such a simulation actually be sound? If detected by any of the conscious beings and "heard" by them, I like to think that, in the context of the simulation, yes.
Whether any of this is actually possible in whatever future unfolds for us is obviously massively debatable. I tend to think it isn't. I think there's something about reality and consciousness which transcends computation. But I'm open to being wrong and I find the ideas fascinating. And when you think about the possible paradigm shifts that could come in the fields of computing, physics, etc... Let's just say I like to stay open-minded
Imagine if we worked out that WE were living in a simulation - and worse - we were part of a VST plugin and only exist indirectly to create silly sounds for throwaway musical artifacts. The entirety of human struggle and suffering for a few wubs
http://sendy.bandcamp.com/releases < My new album at Bandcamp! Now pay what you like!
- KVRAF
- 1617 posts since 11 Dec, 2008 from Minneapolis
Any synths out there do really good metaphysical modeling?
- KVRAF
- 6467 posts since 18 Jul, 2008 from New York
Agreed.Sendy wrote: Would sound in such a simulation actually be sound? If detected by any of the conscious beings and "heard" by them, I like to think that, in the context of the simulation, yes.
I don't see why the wetware of our brains couldn't eventually be simulated.Sendy wrote: I think there's something about reality and consciousness which transcends computation.
A blue screen of death could kill us all.Sendy wrote: Imagine if we worked out that WE were living in a simulation


