LotusLast Monday’s Daily Telegraph carried a short comment by Jonathan Liew on the current Formula One season – specifically, the debate surrounding the sound of the cars’ new engines. In a piece largely obscured by endless strings of similes, he rather missed the point.

He recognises that the broadcast sound is ‘as artificial as it is real’ but is clearly unaware of the reason why loud engines get our adrenaline flowing.

BrainI have a poor memory. I have envied people whose minds enable them to retain, correlate and build upon their memories in ways I cannot. No surprise that I once found myself wondering what it would mean to be able to remember everything. And no small irony that I forgot about it.

I was reminded by a TV documentary that gave such a condition a name, and found myself on a ‘memorable’ journey…

Dark Side of the CoinAs the first decentralised digital currency, Bitcoin claims to be ‘changing finance in the same way that the web changed publishing’. If so, then pro audio is lined up for another game change on the scale that digital audio wrought on the recording industry and online distribution wrought on record companies.

That’s no small claim, but the signposts are there for those prepared to follow them. So, who is onboard for the ride?

MachinimaSecond screen viewing took another decisive step towards your living room with the launch of the PS4 and Xbox One games consoles last week.

Now lined up in direct competition with smart TVs to provide a domestic media hub, both Sony and Microsoft are looking to cover all bases… including making use of second screen working to expand their gaming. How is the next-gen console shaping up?

Neural netI struggled to get my head around computer viruses to begin with. The whole concept was at odds with my understanding of what real-world software was about. And I frowned at the first mention of self-healing DSP. Doesn’t intelligent technology belong to Asimov and his Three Laws?

American neuroscientist Christof Koch reckons that ‘consciousness arises within any sufficiently complex, information-processing system’…

Tablet mixerMy viewing of the episode of Agatha Christie’s Poirot that aired on TV last week wasn’t what anyone had in mind when she penned the story or when the television series began in 1989 – or even when ITV Studios recently made the final run of four episodes. Very much has changed in the intervening years.

And there are more changes in the wind, as the second screen is poised to reshape TV broadcasting – and music could see the greatest changes of all...

Rain Tree CrowIt’s been a while – 22 years, in fact – but as I start to retell the story, I lift my hand and it’s trembling gently. Just as it did then.

For a few moments I am transported back to a quiet London hotel room, where I am reading from the transcription of an interview I had done a few days earlier. I’m telling David Sylvian what the other members of his band have said about him and their work together on their most recent album. It’s a bit tense…

CassetteWhere vinyl and cassette once conspired to carry music in a beautiful symmetry of quality and portability, they have been brought head-to-head by the launch of Cassette Store Day. Rather than reuniting the old team, this has divided opinion over their relative worth.

We’ve become used to the succession of ‘format wars’, but this has to be the first engagement fought between obsolete and obsolescent media…

Internet blockingThe recent collateral blocking of the UK’s Radio Times website as a result of a dispute between the Premier League and an unrelated copyright infringing site is just the latest in a series of warnings over internet control.

There is a strong argument for regulating internet content. But if new censorship arrives, what is its likely impact on broadcasting, music and the wider audio industry? The signs are that it’s a disaster in the making...

Xbox One and PS4‘Games art teams are ten years ahead of audio. We have some catching up to do – we need to ride their coat-tails...’

While some are celebrating the achievements of games sound designers, others are convinced that we are not making the best of the opportunities on offer. And with next-gen consoles and cloud computing in imminent prospect, the ‘others’ may well be right...

Audio waveformI’m not sure how I managed to miss the term ‘acousmatic’ until now, but having found it, I have a whole new take on sound.

If I’d been one of Pythagoras’ akousmatikoi around 500 BCE, I’d have known about it. And if I’d been part of the musique concrète movement during the sixties, I’d have known about it. If you’re involved in radio, TV, movies or games, you need know about it too...

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Fast-and-Wide.com An independent news site and blog for professional audio and related businesses, Fast-and-Wide.com provides a platform for discussion and information exchange in one of the world's fastest-moving technology-based industries.
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