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I had the pleasure of doing some mixing at Vogville Recording Studio today for a project called Kill City Kids. Josh was our assistant mix engineer and we got some fantastic sounds. Here he is labelling the console.
(I did take this on the 11th but I didn't post it to www.mostly365.com in time... oh, well)
I know, geek stuff. But I think the fact that the SonicWall SSL VPN appliance supports Linux is cool. And that they include a non-GUI version of the client is even cooler.
SSL G Series Mix room, Assault & Battery 1, owned by producers Alan Moulder and Flood. Ran by Miloco Studios, London UK.
How to enable SSL for MySQL server and client
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A few years ago my friend Sara found out that an old professional audio console was being junked (think of any footage you've seen of music being produced with the big huge panels with dials, sliders, and blinking lights). I had friends join me at the recycler to try to figure out how utterly ridiculous it would be to transport this huge behemoth into my studio apartment. Instead, I ending up stripping off a bunch of interesting parts, as it was deemed utterly ridiculous.
After the fact, I've now heard interviews with people talking about running their audio through the filters on these consoles. The filter itself could have been earning $100 or more an hour if I had known to grab that part.
I've been slowly trying to figure out how to interface with these parts so I can use them as a big midi controller.