MIT guitar combines acoustics and electronics
"A normal synthesizer synthesizes the fundamentals of a sound and is something created on a computer, but here we don't create the sound from nothing," Zoran said. The strings vibrate and attenuate the bridge of the guitar and then the sound moves like any other acoustic instrument.
Wook Yeon Hwang, a guitarist for 20 years and MIT Media Lab associate agreed. "The problem with synthesized instruments is that they pick a sound at one particular moment so every time it sounds the same," he said. "It's almost impossible to put my feelings into the music." Being able to play on a guitar that uses the natural acoustics of the wood, instead of synthesis, is much better and much more important to musicians, said Hwang, who gave Zoran feedback as the guitar was developed.
-
1
Intel claims Haswell will offer 50 per cent more battery life in laptops
-
2
NSW Police issues warning on 3D printed guns
-
3
UPDATED: 4G in Australia: The state of the nation
-
4
ASIC debacle: Conroy open to transparency over website blocks
-
5
Intel claims Haswell will offer 50 percent more battery life
- CITRIX SYNERGY ’13: Look beyond Cloud infrastructure, says Liang
- CITRIX SYNERGY ’13: Christiancen highlights the need for collaboration
- CITRIX SYNERGY ’13: Devices will change how people work, says Duursma
- IN PICTURES: Citrix Solutions expo (49 photos)
- IN PICTURES: Citrix parties one more night with Maroon 5 ( +57 photos)
- Analytics and personalisation drive leading marketer behaviour: Report
- Innovation and big data take centre stage during CMO panel
- Twitter targets second screen interaction with Amplify advertising partnerships
- Facebook talks hyper-targeting, analytics and cross-platform at AANA event
- Tapping into social experience: Tourism Australia




























