Osc might also work for some phones. It might even work for things like the razor if osc could be ported down to MIDP. No one is doing midi on the phones, but iphone and gphone both have wifi and I believe both java and objective c have osc libraries, so it might be possible to do a cool opengl/osc front end on the phone and then run and osc csound server on a laptop to handle the sound engine. On Fri, Nov 21, 2008 at 10:17 AM, Michael Gogins wrote: > Another option, which I have been thinking about but have not tried, > is setting up a host account somewhere, similar to a Web host, and > then using a mobile device essentially as a terminal for running > Csound on the host. If you have a fixed IP address for your current > personal computer, you could already do this using some kind of telnet > or VNC program from your phone -- that is, assuming that such programs > exist. I will check on that, actually. > > Regards, > Mike > > On 11/21/08, Steven Yi wrote: >> I too had Csound on the Sharp Zaurus and it was very, very slow. I >> would imagine all platforms would have the same issues of not having a >> floating point processor which really slows things down. Blackberry >> wouldn't be possible as it's an all-Java device and as far as I know >> there is no way to do coding in C for it. >> >> My guess is that like my experience with the Zaurus the novelty wears >> out fast. On the other hand, I just bought an Acer Aspire One and >> it's a much faster computer than I expected. Very light and portable, >> and I can run blue with csound and render my work in realtime. I'd >> highly recommend one of these for on the go Csound work. =) >> >> steven >> >> >> On Fri, Nov 21, 2008 at 7:23 AM, Jeremiah Benham >> wrote: >>> On Fri, 2008-11-21 at 16:50 +0200, gary hiebner wrote: >>>> It would be nice to see CSound ported to the mobile phone OS's like >>>> Windows Mobile, Syberian, and the Blackberry OS, then you could >>>> compose CSound compositions on the move and in the "palm of your >>>> hand". That would be great. Is this a possibility? >>> >>> Why not set up a server to send the csd to. Then it returns the rendered >>> file compressed as an mp3 or ogg. I once compiled csound on a Sharp >>> Zaurus. It took like 2 minutes just to render a 1 second sine wave. I >>> could not imagine doing serious work on that unless it was rendered >>> elsewhere. >>> >>> >>> Jeremiah >>> >>>> >>> >>> >>> >>> Send bugs reports to this list. >>> To unsubscribe, send email sympa@lists.bath.ac.uk with body "unsubscribe >>> csound" >>> >> >> >> Send bugs reports to this list. >> To unsubscribe, send email sympa@lists.bath.ac.uk with body "unsubscribe >> csound" >> > > > -- > Michael Gogins > Irreducible Productions > Michael dot Gogins at gmail dot com > > > Send bugs reports to this list. > To unsubscribe, send email sympa@lists.bath.ac.uk with body "unsubscribe csound" >