| Konnichiwa Partev,
Thanks for the information! And it's always nice to hear from an
American Anglophile... You made me feel quite homesick...
I have stumbled across some of Julius O. Smith's bits and pieces on the
web and I intend to look more closely - I really need to get my head
around some of the deeper thoery of PM, I'm still barely scratching the
surface playing around with delay lines and filters based on the chapter
in the Csound book. I have no background at all which is of any use,
unfortunately, apart from having played acoustic instruments!
I don't think I'll worry about treading on people's IP toes for the time
being, it was an academic question really. I'm interested to see
how/whether these patenting laws actually affect people who are
composing and selling music (as opposed to making software or hardware).
Thanks again,
Joe
Partev Barr Sarkissian wrote:
> There are some international treaties and laws within individual countries
> relating to copyrights, patents and such, aka- Intellectual Property (IP) Rights.
> Here in America, checking on those things on the PTO (Patents & Trademraks Office)
> and the LOC (Library of Congress) for Copyrights (computer programs, lines
> of code, printed circuit boards and such).
>
> It's a matter of being aware about what's out there and whose IP toes you
> might be stepping on.
>
> In the U.K., wouldn't the Home Office deal with Intellectual Property (IP) Rights?
> Or the TSO (UK version of America's Gov Printing Office)?
>
> Julius O. Smith, has some great web pages on the subject of wavguide & physical modeling
> research and info. Check it out, I think he's still at Stanford University,
> http://ccrma.stanford.edu/~jos/wg.html.
>
> I used to deal with microwave communication waveguides, so the jump to acoustic
> waveguide concepts, so I got of to some kind of start on it. Still plenty to learn.
>
> BTW- London, love hanging out there, Chelsea and Sloane Square, trekkin' the KR (Kings Road)
> and I love that West End theatre scene. Can't get enough of it. Can't wait to get back there.
> You lucky Brit.
>
> Matte ne (Japanese for "until later"),
> - Partev
>
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>
>
> --- joseph.sanger@virgin.net wrote:
>
> From: Joseph Sanger
> To: csound@lists.bath.ac.uk
> Subject: [Csnd] Re: Re: maybe OT - patents etc
> Date: Tue, 25 Mar 2008 08:42:39 +0900
>
> Aha! That's interesting.
>
> I'm a Brit living in Japan. I wonder how that applies to me!
>
> Joe
>
> nikos roussos wrote:
>> On Sun, 23 Mar 2008 19:34:03 -0700
>> " Partev Barr Sarkissian" wrote:
>>
>>> Don't create a product using Physical Modeling unless,
>>> you can create an algorithm that won't infringe the afore mentioned patents.
>> fortunately, algorithm patents do not apply on europe
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> nikos roussos
>> [ http://autoverse.net/ ]
>>
>>
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