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Re: [idm] fuck cycling 74...

3 messages · 2 participants · spans 2 days · search this subject
2001-04-11 07:36christian adam hresko Re: [idm] fuck cycling 74...
└─ 2001-04-12 10:04ben nevile Re: [idm] fuck cycling 74...
2001-04-13 09:38ben nevile Re: [idm] fuck cycling 74...
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2001-04-11 07:36christian adam hresko> right. except jMax is for linux. > > and cycling 74's products are for mac. > > so my po
From:
christian adam hresko
To:
Date:
Wed, 11 Apr 2001 03:36:12 -0400
Subject:
Re: [idm] fuck cycling 74...
permalink · <3AD4096C.1BC849D2@ix.netcom.com>
quoted 14 lines right. except jMax is for linux.> right. except jMax is for linux. > > and cycling 74's products are for mac. > > so my point is fuck 'em both. > > go rebirth ! > > LOL > > Shimone/Justes > http://www.staticbeats.com > Electronic Music For The Mind >
well, there's no reason you couldn't get jmax running on a pc or a mac. (probably easier with OS X...) and of course there's PD. that will run 'native' on a pc. (no mac damnit!) PD is the equivalent of MSP. miller puckette wrote Max and MSP. cycling 74 licensed Max from IRCAM (although puckette did all the porting...) and i believe miller has 'intellectual' rights regarding PD (but he leaves it open source for you to tweak and whatnot...) and cycling 74 licensed this from somewhere. (IRCAM or miller?) i never really had any bias against cycling 74, but after seeing what they did to nn / nato, that kinda left me with a bitter taste in my mouth. hell, she (netochka) won a relatively prestigious award, so i don't think the 'claims' cycling 74 are making against her are going to hold up much longer. (it's kinda hard to win an award based on your programming and art skills if you have no programming or art skills... which is what most of the claims C74 are based upon) and i believe she's been asked to speak, in public, about this issue. maybe i will purchase a C74 product in the future, but i see no reason to do so now. PD is free. Max is neat and all, but without MSP, you're just building MIDI apps and controllers. (for the most part...) and of course there's SuperCollider. that program in itself does just about everything you need. i'm sure i'll kick myself for getting into a 'political' debate, but if you're taking something that's free, and marketing it under a different name (very much like all the linux companies that died because everyone finally discovered that you can get 5 different builds of linux for 2 - 3 bucks... instead of paying 50 bucks for a box and shitty manual) for a pretty considerable profit, that's kinda lame. i realize this is done everyday in the 'business world,' but i think C74 is gonna dig its own hole if they don't release some software that they actually wrote. (not licensed, contracted, stole, reverse engineered, round trip engineered, etc, etc...) yes, pluggo is cool. but you could write pluggo in MSP if you really wanted to. and since MSP is PD with a 'user friendly' interface, you could just use PD and write your own plugin(s). or use SuperCollider. as for rebirth, um, yeah. i hope that was a joke. have to admit, audiomulch is pretty cool though. but not cool enough to get me to switch from mac to pc. or ditch SC. and you can't forget about reaktor. if there's two programs that you shouldn't pirate, SuperCollider and Reaktor are up there on the list. digital performer is another. okay, i'm done ranting. as for performance on stage. a WACOM tablet. that works. cheers, christian -- "realize that being copied means being alike"
2001-04-12 10:04ben nevilethanks to the people who defended cycling '74 from those backwards, non-complimentary conc
From:
ben nevile
To:
Date:
Thu, 12 Apr 2001 03:04:10 -0700
Subject:
Re: [idm] fuck cycling 74...
Reply to:
Re: [idm] fuck cycling 74...
permalink · <B6FACBA7.77AA%bbn@saoul.com>
thanks to the people who defended cycling '74 from those backwards, non-complimentary conclusions. i am floored by the ease with which deceit and hateful propaganda flow around in this murky soup of 1's and 0's. in the words of that pot smoking science dude, Carl Sagan: "All of the books in the world contain no more information than is broadcast as video in a single large American city in a single year. Not all bits have equal value." the claim that most annoys me is that cycling '74 software is repackaged, that there's no added value over what is freely available elsewhere. going back to programming with the first versions of Max, before David Z. started making it into the feature-rich environment it is today, would be like switching to a rusty Lada after driving a Ferrari. please- conduct your own research either through the downloadable demos or at the appropriate web sites. excuse me this inbox intrusion, idm. bbn (@cycling74.com) --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2001-04-13 09:38ben nevile> Instead of dismissing the original poster's comments and my own as "murky > 1's and 0's"
From:
ben nevile
To:
Christopher Sorg ,
Date:
Fri, 13 Apr 2001 02:38:34 -0700
Subject:
Re: [idm] fuck cycling 74...
permalink · <B6FC172A.7896%bbn@saoul.com>
quoted 3 lines Instead of dismissing the original poster's comments and my own as "murky> Instead of dismissing the original poster's comments and my own as "murky > 1's and 0's" you should actually attempt to address some of the questions > raised by the posts.
Okay, willdo. I was trying to be brief in the interests of everyone not interested. (some of the responses below are paraphrased from something David Z. wrote.)
quoted 4 lines Why can> Why can > someone develop SynC Modular and Audiomulch for $49 from scratch, and > Max/MSP costs the consumer six times as much for similar software that > wasn't even original developed by the company?
first of all, that's not a fair comparison. Max/MSP is a graphical programming environment for music and sound: some people use the software to generate noise in the same way that they'd use SynC Modular or Audiomulch, but other people use the software to make their own stand alone applications, or to control motorized pieces of sculpture that respond to external input, or to do spectral analysis on the sound of bird calls, or to develop a logical, fluid system of speech for interactive movies. David Z. has been working tirelessly for years to give Max/MSP this broad functionality, and the team of programmers he has working with him now - any of whom could find more lucrative work elsewhere - is dedicated and brilliant. the price of Max/MSP is set to be the main source of revenue to continue development of the software. it is our intention to make Cycling '74 a sustainable business--this is in the best interest of the people who would like to depend on the continued viability of the tools they use, as well as the people who work for the company. we would all like a world in which our favorite software could be provided for free, but there is no way that a company like ours could sustain the current development effort by giving away its products. there are a couple of other points to make. first, after having acquired Max from Opcode, we *lowered* the price by $100, despite Opcode's evidence to the contrary that lowering the price would have no effect on sales. second, while this doesn't affect anyone who is becoming familiar with Max/MSP in the past year, there were a lot of people who were afraid that with the Gibson acquisition and subsequent shutdown of Opcode, Max was a dead product. we've not only saved and revived it, we're about to release a new version that is a major advance, and we have many years of further development planned. on developing software "from scratch"... Max/MSP is made up of hundreds of little programs (objects), some of them are complex and others are not so complex. in the version of Max originally developed by Miller Puckette at IRCAM, there were about 50 objects. there is now a suite of audio objects (MSP) plus a large number of new Max objects. the result in Max 4 / MSP 2 is that there are close to 400 objects. some of these, such as sfplay~, timeline, and the new waveform~ object in MSP 2 to name just a few, rival the complexity of many standalone applications. however, because they work within an original framework that our company did not develop, some people think that our level of originality is extremely low. this despite the fact that the improvements and extensions that have been made to the original version of Max developed at IRCAM over the past decade number well into the thousands. many of these improvements will not win any prizes for originality. they are simply based on an obsessive attention to detail and a desire to make the software work as well as it possibly can. others are fairly original and significant. in any case, an argument about originality being the basis for the value of software could only be made by someone who has no appreciation for the software development process, in which almost of all the effort and energy goes into testing and minor performance tweaking.
quoted 1 line And just what DID happen with NATO and Netochka Nezvanova?> And just what DID happen with NATO and Netochka Nezvanova?
the history of dealings with NATO and nn is long, complicated, and has been extremely frustrating for everyone involved. she likes to paint a picture of cycling '74 as an evil conglomerate of thieving idiots; ask anyone who actually knows us or the way that the company works and you'll discover how ridiculous that is. from my perspective the basic plot of the story is this: the Max list used to be run out of McGill university in Montreal. antiorp/nn showed up and started causing mass confusion and frustration amongst the members of the list. they had a vote and decided to kick her off the list, in the same way that the kids in the sandbox may decide to eject a bully. when the mailing list moved from McGill to the cycling '74 web site, antiorp/nn was invited to participate again. part of the motivation for allowing her back on the list came from our users: while she was banned from the McGill web site she had been holding the price of nato "hostage", claiming that when she was allowed back on the list the price would drop. this price drop never materialized. nevertheless, she subscribed to the list and continued her informational assault on our forum. as time went on her comments became more and more inflammatory and hateful: she accused employees of drug addiction, accused us of criminal activity, called us stupid, and even mocked personal appearances. Her tactics were extremely disrupting and consuming: many, many hours were spent staring at my monitor in disbelief, and users, if they weren't overwhelmed or extremely confused by her antics, were complaining. (interested parties can visit http://www.cycling74.com and read the archived messages themselves in the community:discussions section. of relevance to the idm list might be the angry messages posted by sean booth of autechre. quote: ""autechre think n4t0 sucks d0g p00 with a straw" - autechre") so a decision was made not to allow her to participate. Here is the message that David wrote to explain the decision: We have removed the user "netochka nezvanova" from the Max/MSP community discussion site. Additionally, we have blocked all of the domains we believe are controlled by this user from registering for the Max/MSP discussion site. We have reason to believe that the individual or group using this name has initiated legal action against Cycling '74, and it is no longer in our interest to provide a forum for continual attacks against me and my co-workers. It has never been in our interest of course, but we felt there were certain reasons to ignore these attacks and permit "netochka nezvanova" to continue participating here. Those reasons have now disappeared, as I will discuss below. Whether or not there is actually any legal action taken against us is immaterial. If you object to this action, you are free to start your own Max/MSP discussion list. I will not participate in any list in which "netochka nezvanova" participates, and I will discourage my co-workers from doing so as well. If any individual posts anything "netochka nezvanova" writes to our discussion, they will be similarly removed. If this doesn't stop the flow of material from "netochka nezvanova" to our discussion we will resort to moderating every contribution. Let me say a few things about this action. As I indicated above, there were reasons I felt it was worth allowing "netochka nezvanova" to participate here. First, "she" had developed software based in Max/MSP and desired to share it with others. It seemed wrong to me to keep people from learning about it. That was a while ago. Everyone who participates here knows about Nato now. There have been Nato workshops, concerts, discussion lists, and Nato is now distributed by IRCAM and V2. "She" doesn't need our "help" anymore, and from all appearances there is a very low percentage of the material submitted to the list that actually concerns the software. There is a mailing list for support of Nato users in addition to at least two lists run by other parties where Nato is discussed. None of this existed when we decided to take the list over and allow "her" participation. Second, after "she" was thrown off the McGill list, "she" intiated what could best be described as a terror campaign that included spam to anyone who posted to the Max list, denial of service attacks, and threatening and slanderous e-mail sent to random individuals at McGill. I didn't see any point to subjecting myself and my co-workers to this type of harrassment. However, it turns out that many of these acts are felonies. If this behavior recommences, the victims of the behavior can pursue legal remedies, and I would strongly suggest they do so. Third, a lot of people complained to me about the fact that the price of Nato was being held "hostage" until "netochka nezvanova" was again allowed to participate in the Max mailing list. I was supposed to do something about this. Presumably all of these people have purchased their software by now. In any case, the price of Nato has nothing to do with whether "netochka nezvanova" participates in the Max list, and it never did. We do not control the price of Nato. I want to apologize to all of you who have had to put up with the presence of "netochka nezvanova" during our management of this discussion service. We will try to do better. --------- If prompted, I will continue this conversation in public or in private. Frankly I'm just as tired of all the nn junk as everybody else, and would prefer just to forget all about it. Ben --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org