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Comments
Neat. I wonder how well these are going to scale. Probably not cheap enough for me to play with yet since they don't list the prices. They have one on a little M.2 card. That's pretty cool.
Analog computing is fun. I want that little education board he's playing with at the beginning of the video. https://the-analog-thing.org/ It's a bit more than I'd want to spend, but it's cool. I used to play around with analog computing when I was learning about dynamical systems and chaos. I'll have to pull out some breadboards and muck about with it again.
One of the things that blew my mind was using feedback in a visual loop to create a dynamical system that has really complex behavior. It works best with a CRT and a camera with analog controls. You point the camera at the CRT and then you can play with the horizontal and vertical holds on the CRT and the focus and distance on the camera. When you rotate the camera upside down, you get all sorts of cool chaotic systems. It works with a digital monitor too, but the CRT has more parameters you can play with and the static on the screen makes a great initial noise source. After you have it setup, you can perturb the visual by sticking things in the path for an instant and watch how the system develops. It's pretty fun and it is basically a form of analog computing. If you are using a color system, you can play with the hue and tint on a CRT too.
Moog, Buchla, and others make some interesting analog computing systems too.
Funny, I just purchased this bundle for Voltage Modular: https://store.cherryaudio.com/bundles/audio-computing-engine-collection
The promo video by the developer is hilarious
@gusgranite What's different with these modules compared to the modules we already have?
(Except the name and the design of course 😉)
I'm sure they are mathematically impressive but for me it's just some fun logic for CV manipulation. More ways to FSU lol
Analogue computers: