NASA Telescope Data Gets Turned Into Music You Can Play, Includes Where Parallel Lines Converge

NASA Telescope Data Gets Turned Into Music You Can Play, Includes Where Parallel Lines Converge

NASA Telescope Data Music Where Parallel Lines Converge
Composer Sophie Kastner teamed up with researchers to develop versions of NASA telescope data that can actually be played by musicians. This pilot program is currently focusing on a small region at the center of our Milky Way galaxy where a supermassive black hole resides.



Why this region? NASA has telescope data from the Chandra X-ray Observatory, Hubble Space Telescope, and now retired Spitzer Space Telescope, which spans about 400 light-years across. Computers then used algorithms to mathematically map the digital data from these telescopes to sounds that humans can perceive. We’d imagine Google’s MusicLM would generate something completely different-sounding if the right text prompt was inputted.

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I like to think of it as creating short vignettes of the data, and approaching it almost as if I was writing a film score for the image. I wanted to draw listener’s attention to smaller events in the greater data set,” said Sophie Kastner, a composer and vocalist located in Montreal.


Author
Jackson Chung

A technology, gadget and video game enthusiast that loves covering the latest industry news. Favorite trade show? Mobile World Congress in Barcelona.

This Isn’t a Toy Car, Just the F2 Gaming Emulation Handheld That Can Play SNES Games and More

This Isn’t a Toy Car, Just the F2 Gaming Emulation Handheld That Can Play SNES Games and More

F2 Gaming Emulation Handheld Toy Car
A Lenovo Legion Go is perfect for PC gaming on-the-go, but for something a bit more conspicuous, you’ll want the F2 Gaming Emulation Handheld. Aside from looking like a diecast toy car, it features a 3.0-inch IPS LCD screen and has a 1,800mAh battery, which is definitely good enough for all-day gaming on a single charge.



Since the F2 isn’t as powerful as the Analogue Pocket, it is not compatible with original game cartridges nor can the console emulate more modern systems like the PSP, SEGA Dreamcast, or GameCube. Fortunately, the F2 has TV output so you’ll be able to game on a larger screen, rather than deal with its tiny 3.0-inch screen. Still interested? You can get one for $41.93 shipped for Cyber Monday here.


Author
Bill Smith

When it comes to cars, video games or geek culture, Bill is an expert of those and more. If not writing, Bill can be found traveling the world.

Thumby Game Boy Earrings Can Also Play DOOM

Thumby Game Boy Earrings Can Also Play DOOM

Thumby Game Boy Earrings DOOM
Think of Thumby as a thumb-sized Game Boy equipped with a bright OLED screen, a four-way D-pad, two gameplay buttons, and 5 retro games playable right out of the box. One game that it can run, but doesn’t come installed with, is none other than id Software’s DOOM.


Powering these 1.2 × 0.7 × 0.3″ (29.5 × 18 × 8.5mm) earrings is the Raspberry Pi RP2040 processor, running MicroPython, an implementation of Python 3. Other features include a monochrome OLED screen, 2MB of internal storage, 6 tactile buttons (D-pad + 2 action buttons), a Piezo speaker, and a 40mAh rechargeable battery good for up to 2-hours of continuous gameplay on a single charge. Available now, priced at $29.95 USD.


Author
Bill Smith

When it comes to cars, video games or geek culture, Bill is an expert of those and more. If not writing, Bill can be found traveling the world.

Alienware Builds 16-Foot-Long Mechanical Keyboard, Uses it to Play DOTA 2

Alienware Builds 16-Foot-Long Mechanical Keyboard, Uses it to Play DOTA 2

Alienware 16-Foot Mechanical Keyboard DOTA 2
Alienware built a 16-foot-long mechanical keyboard and then proceeded to ask Team Liquid esports team to use it against real opponents in DOTA 2. To accomplish this, Alienware took the exact 3D-scanned proportions of an AW420K keyboard as well as their AW720M mouse and then multiplied them by a factor of 14.



What they ended up with was the world’s largest functional mechanical keyboard, based on the AW420K tenkeyless mechanical keyboard. Unlike its real-life counterpart, which uses Cherry MX switches, this one uses PVC pipe shaft-based custom linear-like mechanical actuation for each switch. These pipes interfaces via an internal rubber band mechanism with a normal-sized mechanical switch connected to the keyboard. The 84 switches are all 3D printed, while the space bar along weighs in at nearly 20 pounds. Did we mention that the giant Alienware AW720M mouse is also functional?

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Author
Bill Smith

When it comes to cars, video games or geek culture, Bill is an expert of those and more. If not writing, Bill can be found traveling the world.