Microsoft | Selector https://selector.news The Electronic Music Journal Thu, 13 Jul 2023 17:18:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.5 https://selector.news/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cropped-selectorIcon-32x32.png Microsoft | Selector https://selector.news 32 32 Microsoft Releases MIDI 2.0 Repository https://selector.news/2023/07/13/microsoft-releases-midi-2-0-repository/ Thu, 13 Jul 2023 17:16:33 +0000 https://selector.news/?p=12248 The MIDI 2.0 Repository is now available for Microsoft developers via GitHub (also a Microsoft service and platform). It marks a step forward for both manufacturers and enthusiasts looking to implement MIDI 2.0 into both hardware and software. 

Until recently, these specifications in Microsoft’s repository were under a strict non-disclosure agreement by the MIDI Association and the Association of Musical Electronics Industry (AMEI). Both companies review every version until full approval.

The MIDI Association, who oversaw both Google and Apple MIDI 2.0 implementations, approved of the overall specification’s updates in late 2022. In a March 2023 article on their site, the Association explains their role in approving on these standards:

“One of the things that has always made MIDI unique… is that no one owns MIDI and the MIDI Associations… don’t sell anything. We… get companies to volunteer their staff to work on really complex problems (like MIDI 2.0), work together to solve those problems… we give away the solutions and specifications for free so anyone can use them to make MIDI products.”

MIDI 

Introduced in 1985, The Musical Instrument Digital Interface (MIDI) technical standard is a solution to synchronizing instruments from different companies. MIDI allows musicians to use electronic sounds in songs with perfect timing and create complex arrangements with little notation expertise.

The MIDI Association

The MIDI Association oversees the standards for full MIDI compatibility among all devices. The group is a vast a community connecting artists and developers using MIDI technology worldwide.

Find more information on the MIDI 2.0 Repository on Microsoft’s GitHub page.

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Project Silica is a Glass Hard Drive that Could Store Music for 10,000 Years https://selector.news/2022/06/15/project-silica-global-music-vault-microsoft/ https://selector.news/2022/06/15/project-silica-global-music-vault-microsoft/#respond Wed, 15 Jun 2022 16:08:16 +0000 https://selector.news/?p=11712 Global Music Vault has already made significant headway towards safeguarding the world’s music. In case a bomb-proof shelter in the Arctic North isn’t enough, the team behind the structure are developing a more portable storage method: Project Silica.

Fast Company reports that the “hard drive style” device is a three-square-inch piece of quartz glass on which up to 100GB of data, or roughly 20,000 songs, is etched using a femtosecond laser. Machine learning algorithms can then access the information by analyzing patterns created when light is shone through the translucent material. Importantly, it is estimated that the data can be retrieved from the device up to 10,000 years later — even if it is exposed to extreme heat or electromagnetic pulse.

Microsoft, who partnered with Global Music Vault on Project Silica, estimates that the common hard drive can store data for roughly five years before it begins to degrade. As the software giant shifts more and more of its business to the cloud, it has come to seek out more reliable ways to store information.

“With over 4 million music producers globally, and over 60,000 songs being released just on Spotify every day, today’s digital and physical data storage solutions are quickly becoming outdated, irrelevant and a risk to our future,” said Global Music Vault Managing Director Luke Jenkison. “We not only want to put this high on the global music industry agenda, we want to work with the best companies in the world to find solutions. As we want to offer the global music ecosystem an eternal solution, we believe that Microsoft’s Silica is that exact solution for our storage needs.”

The developers of Project Silica successfully stored and retrieved the 1978 film Superman in 2019. As part of a new promotion for the device, the Global Music Vault will house platters storing recordings from the International Library of African Music, the Polar Music Prize, and the National Library of New Zealand.

More information on Project Silica is available on the Microsoft website.

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