I'm reading the paper copy right now--highly recommended. It's a bit like Reed Ghazala's Circuit Bending book in that it's more about the have-fun-make-noise-shorting-stuff-out aesthetic than about electronics theory. It avoids using op amps, for example. It's a lot less rambling and incoherent than Ghazala's book; pretty much meant to work as a textbook for a cool college course, which is why I'm reading it. Worth buying for real in my case. Thanks for posting the link!
derevaun wrote:I'm reading the paper copy right now--highly recommended. It's a bit like Reed Ghazala's Circuit Bending book in that it's more about the have-fun-make-noise-shorting-stuff-out aesthetic than about electronics theory. It avoids using op amps, for example. It's a lot less rambling and incoherent than Ghazala's book; pretty much meant to work as a textbook for a cool college course, which is why I'm reading it. Worth buying for real in my case. Thanks for posting the link!
No worries,
i thought that it would be an interesting tome to put here,when I first saw it on the website,I thought that it was about Modular Synthesizers,but after I finished downloading it,i had a read of it and was pleasantly surprised....
So I posted the link here for everyone....
Genius is not all about 99% perspiration, and 1% inspiration - sometimes the solution is staring you right in the face.-Frequencycentral.
All the projects in this book are what kids should be doing in school besides any science courses. In my country they are still very theoretical and boring and then you get the government complaining not enough young people get interested in science.
In a similar vein, I recently saw this video by Earthquaker. So professional: brand building with real content: no pedal demos or comparison, but like a study of great inspiring artist and their adventures into sound.