Gibson Guitars and Ethernet
Gordon_Cabaniss writes "Gibson, the country's second largest guitar manufacturer, teamed up with twelve Silicon Valley engineers and modified the ethernet protocol to link audio between instruments and the mixer. Gibson is calling the technology MAGIC and they are boasting 'both a cleaner sound and a simpler setup.' 'Gibson's Magic carries up to 64 signals per cable, thus saving space and time.' The technology is licensed royalty free and tech giants Sony, Phillips, and Cisco are already showing interest. Gibson also says to not be surprised to see Ethernet ports on guitars within the next 12 to 18 months." I love the idea of my SG having 100mb/s ethernet on it. I'm sure all 3 of my chords would sound ... well, just as bad, but digital.
you may have Ethernet on your Gibson, but I have NetBSD on my Fender.
this sig limit is too small to put anything good h
This is a dangerous guitar. I played one once and almost shelled out the $1500 for it, because it played so damn sweet.
:)
*whew* That was close!
Now, if it had an ethernet port on it? I probably wouldn't have been able to resist. Music and geekery combined into one? An absolutely irresistable combination, IMO.
It takes a real genius to both start a huge multinational guitar company AND at the same time start the cyberpunk genre. Who knew?
------
http://cooltech.org
If it ain't cool, it ain't coolt
Now someone can root my six-string and play some good music, since I have no talent for playing.
hee
Q: How was the concert? A: Fine until some jerk started a denial of service attack on the band over 802.11.
Avoid Missing Ball for High Score
Yamaha developed a similar technology that could transport audio and midi-signals, going over firewire.
m la n.htm
:) and 16x256 channels of MIDI data. Throughput is up to 200Mbps, so you don't have to worry about MIDI latency again :)
http://www.yamaha.com/proaudio/products/system_
It's an interesting way to hook up sequencers, samplers, synthesizers and sound cards to each other without having to plug in audio and midi wires, and worry about magnetic interference.
mLan can do about 100 separate channels of music (good enough for a Dolby 5.1 system?
A generation ago, you proved yourself talented by playing the guitar behind your back, or, in Hendrix's case, with your teeth.
Now, you'll have to prove yourself talented by playing your guitar in such a way as to hax0r slashdot.
Bruce :-)
Bruce Perens.
The actual MaGIC spec is available from Gibson's site.
What the hell -- they "modified" ethernet? Sorry, then it's not ethernet. Can you broadcast other data over the same fabric and have it work? Then MAYBE I'll believe it's ethernet. Other than that, they ripped off some ideas. But why do people keep reinventing the wheel like that? I bet they could have used EXACTLY ethernet and it would have just worked.
Guitarists have already rejected technically-superior digital solid state amps going back instead to vacuum tubes because of the warmer sound. They won't go digital this time either.
I run a 16 and 32 channel mixing board myself and just figuring out which channel goes to which instrument/mic is a pain sometimes. According to the article when the item is plugged in it would show up on the mixing board as "Whomever's Guitar" or whatever it was set to. This would be very very handy I think for the people behind the scenes. Not only will it be beneficial to the quality of the sound but beneficial to people like me. Hopefully this technology will be implemented in more things that guitars, which I'm certain it will.
It'd make life easier if you could upload effects straight to the guitar/mic instead of having to run it through an effects box too.
this in theory is okay i guess, but i have a
feeling it'll "TAKE OFF" like all the midi
synthesizers that've been around for years for
guitars. They're damned neat, but most people
no matter what they play, be it metal, punk,
blues or country, will eventually come to realize
that life is good w/ a> a guitar that's quality,
b> a stompbox or two, c> a good amp. ethernet be
damned.
and oh yeah. my 79 strat plays better than your
les paul.
(hey, stupid ass OS wars always start here, couldn't resist)
Guitars are "DIGITAL", which means operated by fingers.
Their sound isn't yet DIGITIZED!
Let's not all suck at the same time please
I have a lot of experience working with guitar players and many of them would never go with this type of thing. Most guitar players like their sound raw, using analog effects and tube amps. Why? Because its sounds so good. There's nothing like the crunch of plugging your guitar into a Marshall stack and blowing people out of the building. It's tough to capture that tube sound in digital technology, and this ethernet guitar takes it one step farther away from the analog that they want. I really can't see a lot of hard core musicians going for a system like this.
There is no reasonable defense against an idiot with an agenda
:wq
to "live" music over the internet!
Heck 4 and 8 tracks will be a thing of the past if this goes. Instead of hooking your guitars up to a 4 track and then making recording off of that for your demo, you now go straight into your computer.... your basic studio setup but with digital quality sound and digital output onto a demo CD....
The more I write the more I like the idea....
Better start learning where to put my finger for that A chord now....
www.slightlycrewed.com - Because aren't we all?
Okay, so how long until cable Internet providers kludge up a protocol to send audio data over MAGIC, use a software V.90 modem implementation treating the audio packets like an analogue phone line, and run PPP on top of that?
-- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
I can see the headlines now:
"Unnamed Hacker 'ownz' Ted Nugent - 200 fans hospitalized for serious inner ear bleading.
"The Nuge was not available for comment as authorities are investigating allegations that a hacker had broken security on Ted Nugent's favorite guitar. Apparently, the attack caused the amplifier stack to overload, drawing about 800,000 watts for approximately 10 seconds. The resulting decibel levels were off the scale and one spectator described it as "WHAT? WHAT WAS THE QUESTION? WHAT?!". Several fans were hospitalized in critical condition - surgeons are even now trying to figure out how to re-sect bones that have been 'pulverized by hypersonic forces."
This post copyrighted, patented, folded, spindled and mutilated. If you live in the EU, even reading it may be illegal. If you live in France, you probably wouldn't get it anyway.
To celebrate the occasion of my 1000th post, I will post no more forever on Slashdot. Goodbye.
What really gives me pause about this is that most musicians I know can barely figure out their effects pedals, let alone get their amps setup right; I don't know how they're going to deal with ethernet (and some of these guys are pretty accomplished).
I can see it now; the lead, rhythm and bass guitarists on stage battling for QoS priority on the switch.
Whatever you do don't let the drummers know about this, the last thing we need is networked drums. Drummers hog enough of the audio spectrum, stage and free beer as it is, we don't need them hogging bandwidth also.
I say this out of total love and respect for my musician friends of course.
-silversurf
Wanna know the first problem I see with this: Nobody plugs their guitar straight into the mixer. The guitar amplifier is an integral part of the tone and playability of a guitar. A Les Paul plugged into a Marshall stack; A Stratocaster plugged into a Fender Twin; These are still around because they work. Stick a mic in front of the amp, run that through the sound system, and away you go. Save the digital conversions for places where it's needed.
Bands don't need more-complicated ways to hook their guitars up. The current way works just fine. There are some wonderful improvements occuring with digital consoles, digital system processors, and so on. But these have little to do with Gibson and guitars.
Gibson is still trying to find ways to put a New & Improved label on an already perfect guitar invented over 40 years ago, just to get people to buy the latest crap.
Sad part is, people will.
(Yes, I'm a sound man. And I do have digital consoles to work with. But all the digital crap in the world won't make a player any more talented.)
NetInfo connection failed for server 127.0.0.1/local
MIDI is not what they are talking about here. They are talking about audio. MIDI is not audio, but rather 'piano roll'. The only data being sent to the sequencer/keyboard is which notes to play, and when. Conversely, audio is the actual audio signal generated by the instrument, whether it be a keyboard or a guitar.
The true value of audio over ethernet is the existing infrastructure (hubs, switchers, etc), coupled with being able to identify 'devices' hooked up to your setup. Mixers, be them software or hardware mixers, that are 'ethernet aware' would be able to auto-assign the devices name that an instrument reports itself as to the network to faders and knobs in your setup. Currently, you have to know which wires are going from which instruments into what audio-ins on your hardware/software mixer/multitrak; in order to fade a guitar line, for instance, you need to be physically aware of which audio-in the guitar is connected to. This amounts to a huge amount of organizational work for producers/techs, as they must use project software or notebooks to keep track of how various projects are wired up. Some technologies are alleviating these troubles, but from what I understand, its still a pain in many setups to keep track of which songs and projects are wired up which way.
Hopefully, this Gibson technology would allow producers and sound guys to forget those details, and just assign 'network instruments' to which ever faders they please, without ever having to verify that the guitar was plugged into the correct audio-in, corresponding to the controls (faders, knobs) you wish you use to do your production and mixdowns.
At least, thats what I get out of it.
BTW, I am a d'n'b producer with a fairly functional grasp of lo-pro to mid-pro MIDI and audio gear, so while I'm not privvy to the nitty gritty of doing sound for live shows or full rack mixers in-studio, I think I can glean what the true pay off is here, for the sound guys and musicians alike.
"Old man yells at systemd"
A good crack would be to break into someone's guitar and make it play 'Starway to Heaven" over and over and over...
I think this will make a good bus for communicating between digital devices (say, a DAT and your computer, or maybe a keyboard/MIDI box and a computer), but it seems to be a pretty crummy way to communicate between a guitar and an amp. (And I am sure as hell not going to record guitar directly into my PC!)
One good side effect, though, will be "ruggedized" ethernet cables available at my local music store. =)
But more along the line of AES/EBU or SPDIF.
MAGIC can transfer digitized sound without (excessive) jitter and latency like AES/EBU. But AES/EBU can only transfer a single stereo channel in 24 bit/92kHz whereas MAGIC can transfer 32 channels in 32 bit/192kHz!
MIDI only transfers information like notes, volume etc. Not the digitized sound itself. This enables you to connect a MIDI keyboard with a synthesizer and produce sound, but NOT to transfer digitized sound from e.g. a guitar to an amplifier or DAT.
The spec. for MAGIC allows for sending control packets containing MIDI information though. Therefore it can ultimately replace BOTH MIDI and AES/EBU etc.
It seems to me (as a guitarist, computer programmer, and amp builder) that part of the purpose, if not the MAIN purpose, of the guitar amp is to color the sound of the guitar in pleasing ways. So if tubes produce better colorations than "technically-superior digital solid state amps", then the tubes are technically superior, n'est pas?
:}
The only thing "technically superior" about digital amps is that they are cheaper to manufacture.
And no, i won't be putting ethernet on my Gibson. Experience and simple physics dictates that the cord itself from the high-impedance guitar electronics to the amplifier input also colors the tone, and i'm not going to give up that coloration. Digitizing at 16bit/44.1khz "CD quality" commits absolute horrors on the subtleties of good tone (this can be mostly defeated with sufficient bandwidth, ie 24bit/96khz, but the Philips/Sony "Perfect Sound Forever" format is a crime against music).
Then again, my main guitar is an acoustic with no electronics at all, so i suppose it won't be needing ethernet.
Hand me that airplane glue and I'll tell you another story.
If hardware manufacturers actually support this protocol, it will be a huge boon to the home studio hobbyist. Imagine, a 32-in/32-out soundcard for the price of an ethernet card! My money is on Yamaha. They already have hardware that supports their standard, including a couple of digital mixers. If only Gibson and Yamaha would work together on this, we might have a slight hope of interoperable standards.
"It's Dot Com!"
As a guitar player of 15 years and the proud owner of a ton of bizzare equipment (and the proud ower of a B.A. in Music Composition) I can say this will bomb. There are very, very subtle electrical interactions that happen between an amp (or stomp boxes) and the pickups in the guitar. You think that there isn't a forward or backward voltage bias that effects the sounds? You think this stuff is so simple you can just digitize it and expect the magical ethernet to handle it?
No, kids. This is the wild and wooly world of magical analog electronics and while digital makes leaps and bounds, I honestly doubt it will quite match the lovely interaction between a classic Les Paul and a Marshall stack. The would be a GODSEND for MIDI, but as another poster noted, Yamaha already has a way of doing this over Firewire, which is a vastly superior technology for this kind of time-sensitive thing because of it's isochronous transport layer. Ethernet with it's packet collisions will just simply not do. (not to mention the joy of potentially having firewire powered synth modules without the pain in the ass wall warts)
And finally, latency is the death of electric/electronic instruments. Can they guarantee the (nearly) zero latency that I can already get with my analog gear?
"We have put software on top of Ethernet that basically synchronizes those packets to a master clock"
-This sig intentionally left blank
"As soon as you plug the guitar in to the Ethernet port or whatever instrument it is, it'll come up 'Nate's guitar,'" Yaekel said. "Just like in Ethernet, when you plug into an Ethernet hub, you're going to see your computer's name on the network."
When's the last time this guy tried to set up a network in real life? And where the hell does he think he's going to get ethernet savvy roadies?
The last roadies I worked with exposed a port every time they bent over to tape down a cord, but it wasn't ethernet.
Disclaimer: MINAA (Mummy! I'm Not An Animal!)
sounds like you have found a spin-off market "musician quality connectors"
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
Okay outside of my first comment which was based on reading the press release I mow have digested their RFC and am less impressed with the design.
First, MaGIC is built on UDP, so delivery of the datagrams are not guarantied. If a collision occurs on your network you've lost data. The way we hear sounds this will become noticeable if enough collisions happen.
My biggest beef is the sampling rates are too small and to few. The tradeoffs are for a higher sample you lose channels (48k sample gives 32 channels, 192k has 8).
They didn't take flight with the technology and dream big.
Rather than doing something completely new, they did rework MIDI for Ethernet (not that that's a bad thing). It will have it's place, just not with guitars, and most definitely not live on the stage.
III.IIVIVIXIIVIVIIIVVIIIIXVIIIXIIIIIIIIVIIIIVVIII
this doesn't seem like it's going to replace the analog on the guitar (you'll still be able to play with the way your humbuckers are wired). it would however replace all of the analog footpedals that people daisy chain together (unless they convert from digital back to analog, or do the effect through software).
my guess is that the guitars would have an analog -> digital converter before the jack, and that they'd send this signal over 64 channels to the 'intelligent' mixer that they envision. i think that this would have some very real benefits to professional bands and their rodies, as well as high end studios.
i really don't think that this would interests hardcore players either, but i also think that it won't elimate all the analog coolness that a really great guitarist can manipulate. and who knows, it might create a whole new set of neat tricks...
A: None. The Universe spins the bulb, and the Zen master merely stays out of the way.
When this technology is mass produced, most guitars at the amature level will probably have it. that means that you can have a bunch of friends over, plug into your network and jam. no more set up.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
Or, by reversing the process, a Postscript file can become an eight-minute fusion solo...
Guitarists are VERY conservative when it comes to gear. I worked as a vacuum tube tech for a while working on guitar amps. Guitar amps are the only place in electronics where you look at an RCA manual from the 1930's to find out what the specs are for something.
The digital amp-modeling units have had some succesd---I have a POD that I play almost exclusively. But guitars will NOT change. The iconic image of a rock star holding a Gibson or a Fender is embedded in the minds of too many middle-aged guitar players.
They only way this could happen is if the plug looks exactly like the current 1/4" model (another product from the 30's). Oh, and it has to be compatible with existing analog gear.
Premature optimization is the root of all evil
-Does anyone know where I can download Gibson-Linux?
-"Yeah dude, we were like ROCKING wembley stadium... But then we got slashdotted"
-Cant play tonight.... guitar got a virus.
-This Guitar has caused an illegal operation and will be restarted.
-"Hi, looks like your trying to play Johnny B. Goode. Would you like me to help you with that?"
-This guitar sucks. It only has two notes: 1 and 0
-Hey, I cant get broadband. Do you think they will release a modem version?
-Token ring on the guitar string?
-Packet loss during the thrash-metal guitar solo?
Was the big bang louder than drum & bass?
"These go to 802.11!"
Now what we need is some kind of Napster-type client so we can bypass CD's and steal Metallica tunes directly from James Hetfield's guitar!
I guess my license plate reading "I hacked the Gibson", in reference to the awful movie Hackers, will have an entirely new meaning.
Why? Why not wireless networking? That would make setup even simpler.
324006
circa 1983: "check check 1 2 check check 1 2"
circa 2005: "traceroute traceroute"
For a digital amplifier to truly replace tubes, the current state of DACs and ADCs just don't cut it. There needs to be a much higher resolution in these devices, perhaps 128 bit or even higher. Then, these devices need to learn to react to the dynamics of the player well - a good tube amp can go from a soft passage to full-tilt scream by playing harder and hitting the volume control. Finally digital amps need to be able to do feedback - i.e. interact with guitar pickups in such a way that will interactively produce feedback at different harmonics of the original signal depending on the angle and proximity of the guitar to the amplifier.
Until that happens, I'm sticking with tubes. Perhaps a better application of digital tech to the world of guitar would be to simply make tubes work better - more reliably and consistently.
That said, I'm all for ethernet replacing MIDI. But that's an entirely different proposition.
No, Thursday's out. How about never - is never good for you?
Collisions do not mean data loss on Ethernet. They are just a method of arbitrating for the wire. The link layer will automatically detect the collision, back off and retry. No data loss occurs unless things are hopelessly screwed up.
That doesn't mean that it will be proprietary.
A system like this cannot be done without modified protocols. The existing ones don't cut it.
--jeff
ipv6 is my vpn
Audio should ALWAYS be analog for the best quality. Sure sure, digital protects against noise, but you'll never get the same quality. You always gotta drop information with digital music, 44000 samples a second for example.
Then again any difference between analog and digital quality is purely theoretical...I surely wouldn't notice the difference.
--Roy
Anybody who doesn't want the sound affected by the basic 1/8" cable just uses low-z mic cables anyways. Plenty of (acoustic) guitars are available which have mic-type outputs built in (washburn, for one).
It looks very much like this is an open source re-implementation of cobranet which is a closed source per-audio-channel license fee system used in existing installations at Tokyo Disney Seas
This is very exciting and goes far beyond just putting an ethernet connector on a guitar.
It is not just streaming audio - synchronized sample clocks are the hardest part about a system like this, since you can and do have multiple transmitters that need to be sample synchronous. That is why they have to use a 'modified' ethernet protocol.
Take a look at Level Control Systems for the type of existing high end audio DSP gear that works with cobranet.
disclaimer: I work with Level Control Systems --jeff
ipv6 is my vpn
>Monster instrument cables are severely overrated.
Sure, and horribly overpriced, but people will still buy them. Especially when the salesman fixing them up with their equipment is on commission and sees the chance to sell $300 worth of cables to go with the amp.
But people will buy anything if an "expert" tells them it's better. Look at the green marker CD enhancement kits, Slick 50, any number of body detoxification "systems"...
Snakeoil will ALWAYS sell.
-l
This is ingenious, so long as it truly IS low/no latency.
When I set up a stage show now, I usually run 24 returns and 6 sends from the board. Industrially, that's a small snake, but it still weighs a ton. Imagine being able to run the whole thing on a single Cat5 ? _AND_ when my guys plug in their gear, there's no guessing which return they're in -- "Brent's Guitar" will henceforth always be in channel 8 or whatever.
Too bad I won't be able to afford this until the 3 next best things come out.
Or maybe...
Sure, this is obviously going to be a way for moving around all sorts of audio and other synchronized information when it gets going. But it's not a stretch to think that Gibson guitars are going to be the first things that have the capability.
[TMB]
I'm very much with you on the idea of tubes making for a great sound and solid state not so much, but I'm not so mighty about my tube amp since I heard a few effects systems on computer systems that did a passing good job of coloring a digital signal like tubes. Now, it's not 100 percent, but it was better than anything solid state that I've heard. That said, it's looking like it would be worth having digital signal from the guitar, and then running your effects afterwards. It probably won't ever please a strict purist, but it adds a level of flexibility that wasn't there before, and the best part is that one can record a pure signal and then manipulate it many different ways to find just the right sound.
Also, don't rule out Ethernet just because you're acoustic. I play mostly classical guitar, and I would love to be able to take the signal from the end-block mike and send it noise-free to the sound board. In this instance, coloring by the amplifier is a bad thing (at least for me).
Virg
i asked once a while ago - and nobody was able to answer - whether it was possible or feasible to route audio signals over an ethernet network. my goal was to be able to have ethernet speakers with a sound source plugged into the network as well.
my idea was spurred by the fact that my new office has ethernet in every room, but to get sound from the MP3 music server into those rooms, it would either require streaming the signal over the LAN (and each box would have its own buffer lag.. ugh) or else run speaker wire through all the rooms as well. why not use some portion of the ethernet standard to pump an audio signal through?
so, it looks like somebody did me one better, and made an ethernet-enabled guitar and amp.
so, when do i get to buy a receiver with 10/100 and a bunch of speakers with RJ45 jacks on them?
- Entertaining Bits from the Ancient Kernel Tree
Why would anyone use this when they could use Yamaha's mLAN anyway? mLAN's based on FireWire, so it's much faster and has the advantage of having a built-in isochoronous (time-dependent) transport protocol.
It's clearly the audio bus of the future (due in no small part to the fact that it can be connected to most off-the-shelf computers these days) -- it's even already supported in Mac OS X Core Audio.
While I'm skeptical as regards Gibson's market targeting with this tech, we may get some good mechanical design out of it.
A notorious problem for musical applications of computer-oriented communication layers (e.g. Firewire, USB, 10/100B-T, etc.) is the lack of robustness of the connectors and/or cables. Various computer music authors have written papers addressing this very issue. (e.g. search CCRMA's archives for a repurposing of AES/EBU for non-audio musical data.) Perhaps Gibson will come up with a *really* robust ethernet mechanical connector design and cabling that can withstand many harsh connect/disconnect cycles and other physical stresses that live guitarists will put on their equipment.
> Digital effects can match any tube amp...
It doesn't matter if you're trolling; this statement needs response. All arguments about digital effects quality aside, that's only part of the story. There's an issue with the signal generated by the instrument to begin with. Most digital samples cut off at 22,500 (20,000 for CD) hertz, which many will say is unimportant as those frequencies are too high to hear by themselves. However, those high frequencies interplay with the audible ones in ways that are noticeable when they're absent. So, even with perfect replication of the coloring, the base signal is often short of the original. Such is not the case with analog equipment. Although I tend to like digital signal myself (because of its uses in signal processing), it does make a difference to the sound, which is why so many musicians disfavor it.
Virg
Now somebody will finally be able to hack the Gibsons.
Two things to consider: the connectors could be made to handle the abuse (think XLR-like, but with 8 prongs), and even if the cable ends break, replacing them is a snap (no pun intended). This wouldn't be much of an issue if it really caught on.
Virg
I'm gonna wait till someone ports MAME over, so I can play Ms. Pac-Man on guitar.
Would a 5-piece qualify as a beowulf cluster?
decimate his fan base by 100%
That's humorous, given the meaning of 'decimate'.
1. [most] effects boxes ... cannot be uploaded
2. the few that can have proprietary formats ...
3. the few that allow algorithm creation are like $3,000 US (i.e. Eventide.).
conclusion: the creation of a guitar you could upload effects algorithms to is unlikely.
So don't put it in the guitar. (You didn't put the fuzz box, wah-wah, pedal, reverb, etc. in the guitar, did you?)
Once the signal is a digital sample in UDP on Ethernet you can run it through a cheap PC and compute any effect you want.
Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way