Category Archives: Music

Yamaha DTX 550K drums

Entering the world of eDrums. After playing on that crappy Rock Band drums for to long. It was fun but not the real thing, so I had to do a serious upgrade.


The soft mesh on the snare is fantastic and offers a real realistic bounce.
Also I bought drum sticks from Zildjian Anti-Vibe 5A with carbon infills to dampen impact.

I did not yet try to connect “the real” drums to the PS3….. 😀 it is on the list

BeNuts Ska@StuStaCulum

Right after their big tour in Japan,
the BeNuts finally arrived at Munichs biggest annual student
festival, the “STUdentenSTAdt spectaCULUM”.


Above video is from one of their biggest hits: Ska Summer Night,
filmed during their concert today.
I have to excuse for the bad quality, but I only had my wifes
camera by the hand, which only does QVGA, with horrible 8kHz mono
8bit sound.

The BeNuts started 12 years ago in munich, and have already managed
to be successful on tour in Madrid, Moscow and the big japanese
cities Tokyo, Osaka…

Check out the BeNuts Homepage, buy a CD there and
further checkout the StuStaCulum website.

Last minute XMAS gifts

To all of you seeking for last minute
xmas-presents, I can suggest this great audio CD of the korean band
Bulldog Mansion which has a wide variety of different music styles
as they play some funk, bigband, ballad, ska and rock.
In my eyes a perfect xmas gift for all people who want to escape
the last frustating 5 years of english and/or german top100
music.
theresheis
I just loved the songs of Bulldog Mansion when I did find a nice
flash cartoon on the net: there she is (goto->amalloc) another
part of this cartoon series will be published soon.
http://www.sambakza.net
http://www.bulldogmansion.com

The Mediacenter Ecstasy – Part IV

Success ! I got DRM/DRI compiled
cleanly and have an totally
accellerated X-Display. XVideo Motion Compensation is also
working
as I found a precompiled Xorg version with all the stuff
needed.The funny thing is, that my MythTV database is now broken,
had
no time yet to investigate that further, to much to do at
work.

Meanwhile there’s also a patch available for IR-Support on my
DVB-T Terratec 1400 card. But I think I’ll skip this one and
use my good old X10 radio remote, which is already supported
in
the kernel.

Let’s see when everything is done, I’m also planning to strip
down the whole system to a working Image for you EPIA-folks
out there.

Good night…

The Ultimate Mediacenter – Part I

I’m already looking a long time for
the ultimate media and entertainment center out of the box, but yet
nothin’ serious came up my horizon so far.

Since living in a flat, I’m not allowed to use a satellite-dish
which terminates my dream of the wonderufl DVB-S. We got cable with
almost 40 channels, most of them home-shopping-crap… but at least
Munich is DVB-T broadcasting about 24 channels since May this year.
DVB-C brings only 8 free digital channels on cable, all the other
stuff is commercial and really expensive.

So the obvious way to go was, using DVB-T together with analogue
channels from the cable and mix all that well with the usual
mediacenter stuff (movie player,photos,music,dvd,text).

I studied all of the latest set-top boxes, and commercial
media-centers, but all of them lack one or more big features:
Internet-TV-channels and custom onscreen infos/ticker
Finally you would end up with more single media boxes than a
home-cinema-rack has AV-connectors.

Building my own PC media center seems the only way to achieve my
“everybody’s?” ultimate mediacenter goal.

The big problem now is, that it’s almost impossible to find a
software which can handle DVB-T and analogue channels within one
channellist. That means you always have to change the device/tuner
and then select the channel, instead of simply channeljump through
analogue and digital broadcasts. Further to pass analogue channels
the same way as a DVB receiver does to a mpeg2 decoder, analogue
channels will need to be encoded to mpeg2 first to feed a unique
output-decoder… grrrrrrrrr.
I think most people will not understand the above as long as they
haven’t tried by themselves.

OK, I skipped the analogue part for the moment, and start using
DVB-T.

Yesterday I bought the Terratec Cinergy 1400 DVB-T Card, which is
now officially supported in Kernel 2.6.13. (There’re also
mixed-mode cards available, but without mpeg2 encoder, which means
it’s just two cards in one, nothing more.)

Already a long time ago, I bought myself a Mini-ITX PC, to have a
compact, powersaving and silent computer for the living room.
Since I’m a gentoo linux enthusiast, I compiled everything from
scratch on that slow=powersaving machine.

Compiling the new kernel for an Epia M10000 Ezra board, was quite a
challenge, although I had absolutely no problems in the past, but I
found out “vesafb-tng” doesn’t work anymore in 2.6.13, “vesafb-old”
does only work if it’s not compiled as a module. And compiling
takes quite a time on this 900MHz hardware. For a first try I
skipped patching the sources with older 2.6.7 epia patches, which
I’ll need later to get hardware-mpeg-acceleration CLE266,
framebuffer and XVideo motion compensation XvMC running.

After compiling 2.6.13 for the third time, this time successful, I
gave up and did go to sleep.
Not sure if I’ll pick up there tomorrow, or simple use my already
prepared debian-dvd’s.

It’s hard to reduce power consumption, if you have to let the
computer running the whole night to get some stuff compiled.
Where’s the powersaving here ? A fast machine can at least save
power when it’s unused.

…to be continued…