Turn Your Nintendo DS into a Wireless Synth and Controller
With its touchscreen input, compact size,
internal Nintendo-style synth, and wireless Internet connection, the Nintendo DS
has a lot of appeal for music use. The challenge is how to hook it up to a
computer. TheRain has a hardware hack called DSMIDI: with a little
soldering and hacking, you can connect the DS to a standard MIDI cable via a
cartridge.
DSMIDIWiFi goes much further, though: without
picking up a soldering iron or connecting a cable, you can use your DS as both a
synth
and a
controller, all over the DS’ WiFi connection. And now, the good news:
the software is finished, and the solution
is a free download away:
DSMIDIWiFi — Wireless MIDI for the Nintendo
DS [Project site, instructions, and download]
Server software on your Mac, Windows, or Linux
computer translates the WiFi data into MIDI messages for use with whatever music
or visual software you like. (As I observed on Create Digital Motion,
this could make the DS a very drool-worthy wireless controller for VJs.) Three
applications are included, two for control and one for
synthesis:
1. X/Y “Kaoss Pad”
controller: The must-have for the DS, you can
turn the touchscreen into an X/Y controller. This to me is especially exciting,
as it’s a natural for the DS hardware and the units are small enough that
they could be propped on a keyboard, etc.
2. Keyboard
controller: A MIDI keyboard controller sends
notes, pitch bend, and MIDI controller adjustments via an on-screen keyboard.
Sure, you might not want to use this to replace a hardware keyboard, but it
could be great for programming and for controlling other things (triggering
clips, running visuals, etc.).
3. DS
Synth: The internal sound generator provides
vintage Game Boy-like sounds. Now, I know purists prefer the original 8-bit Game
Boy, but I kind of like the idea of bringing chiptune music into the 21st
Century … especially if means I can rationalize buying a DS Lite. Erm, I
mean … uh … going wireless.
The software is the creation of TheRain and Tobias
Weyand, the creator of NitroTracker. The good news for you programmers
out there is that they’ve completed open-sourced the code, so you could
use this as the basis of your own wireless Nintendo DS
creations.Next up: hacking the Wii. (Any
takers?)
Posted: Wed - May 9, 2007 at 12:16 AM