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reaching out to developers regarding accessable midi seequencer app for blind musicians.

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Comments

  • @hes said:
    I've started work on a little pet project porting the open source Orca sequencer to iOS. It's my first iOS (or MacOS) development, and I'm not a great programmer anyway, but it seems like a doable project to learn some iOS programming. Once I get far enough, I will post what I've got on github and it will definitely be an open source project.

    I wonder how Orca on iOS would meet OP's needs. The interface is entirely ASCII text, so I assume not much of a problem with enabling accessibility (but really I have no idea). And Orca is a powerful tool, can be used many different ways. It was designed with live-performance in mind. But, I think the optimal interface, even on iOS will be a regular keyboard, so I'm not sure why running the already-existing Orca on MacOS or Windows might not be a superior solution. In other words, I'm wondering why the need to get these tools on iOS, what's drivimg the desire to use an iPad rather than a Mac/PC?

    (Also, Orca already runs on Chromebook and Android tablets, inside Chrome -- or any other Web-MIDI browser. I don't know browser standards, possibly accessibility to read characters on screen is already built in, and this is an already-existing solution for a tablet based midi sequencer. Here's a link to a running version of Orca in the browser, along with a tutorial; it will run but I don't think it will work to send midi unless you're running it in a browser that supports Web-MIDI: https://metasyn.github.io/learn-orca/ Actually, I'm not even sure of that, because it makes music on my Firefox on MacOS and I don't think I've even installed Firefox's Web MIDI extension. I think this may be because the version running in the link is driving Orca's companion Pilot synth -- also open source and running in-browser -- so there's no need of sending midi out of the browser. . . Maybe someone can check if this runs on an iOS device.)

    My initial conception when starting to think about this project was more like something along the lines of Orca and a live coding thing. Trey's idea is much more in line with a traditional sequencer with accessibility features. I think I was thinking about it from a coding like perspective because much of my interface to the world is through code/text. My initial thoughts don't go to the power of muscle memory and how well it works. For example, my mind is completely blown away by the youtube vid with Rob Scallon and Carolina Eyck where she describes how she achieves her incredible control of the theremin.

    It'll be really cool to see you get Orca going on iOS. It kinda reminds me of rogue-like games in the terminal days. That's a good thing for me BTW.

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