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2010-11-29
, 10:34
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Posts: 36 |
Thanked: 9 times |
Joined on May 2010
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#2
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2010-11-29
, 10:56
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Posts: 1,522 |
Thanked: 392 times |
Joined on Jul 2010
@ São Paulo, Brazil
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#3
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2010-11-29
, 11:09
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Posts: 3,159 |
Thanked: 2,023 times |
Joined on Feb 2008
@ Finland
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#4
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There probably won't be much amplifying going on considering how low the N900 is (i mean at least not by the N900 itself, if you hook it to a speaker with builtin amplifier or a standalone amplifier box or somthing obviouslly you will get amplification)
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2010-11-29
, 11:28
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Posts: 1,522 |
Thanked: 392 times |
Joined on Jul 2010
@ São Paulo, Brazil
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#5
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2010-11-29
, 12:33
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Posts: 46 |
Thanked: 31 times |
Joined on Jun 2010
@ Lebanon
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#6
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The Following User Says Thank You to karimko For This Useful Post: | ||
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2010-11-29
, 12:47
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Posts: 9 |
Thanked: 1 time |
Joined on Aug 2010
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#7
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2010-12-01
, 09:34
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Posts: 46 |
Thanked: 31 times |
Joined on Jun 2010
@ Lebanon
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#8
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2010-12-01
, 09:49
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Posts: 237 |
Thanked: 193 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
@ Brighton, UK
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#9
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2010-12-01
, 09:59
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Posts: 820 |
Thanked: 436 times |
Joined on May 2010
@ Portsmouth, UK.
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#10
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Tags |
guitar, i'll make, maemo 5, real-time-fx, rt-fx-processor, the popcorn |
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Imagine hooking up your electrical guitar to your n900 and playing with distortion, reverb, and all the amp effects you want right through the speakers or earphones. That would be cool, since the solution would be portable with no amps or hardware to carry.
In order to achieve this, we need to:
I'm not an expert but I think these are the basic building blocks on which we can build our argument from.
Some searching on signal processing for linux gave the following interesting links:
What do you think? Possible? Any experts who can chip in?