Hi Alexandros,
That's cool! Congrats! I don't think I'll be able to attend, but do you know if the videos are going to be available on the internet afterwards?
I gave several pyo-related talks in various Python conferences over Europe - people were always quite enthusiastic about this module (although I'm not sure it had a real impact on growing the community...).
Regarding the audio setup there: the available hardware in conferences can be unpredictable and can yield some bad surprises, unless you can have a personal contact with the person in charge beforehand. But actually I know the person that was in charge in Athens last year - hopefully she'll be there again this year. I can make the link if you want so that you can plan you talk in the best conditions. I'd wait a little bit however, because she's very busy with EuroPython in Krakow right now. Let me know me what you think.
Regarding the content: I'm using pyo heavily for live concerts, in relatively complex setups that you won't be able to reproduce in the conference. But if you want to showcase what's possible in this context, it could be possible to show a video and relevant parts of the code. For instance,
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J5sOITc29lU shows a motion-controlled harmoniser: there's an IMU on the flute, whose position in the three axis influences the nature of the third (minor, major, sus4), the fifth (diminished, perfect, augmented) and the seventh (diminished, minor, major), allowing to play four-part harmonies with one flute. The relevant part of the pyo code is ridiculously simple as compared to the complexity of the result! (The real core of it is in lines 24-28+35 of
https://bitbucket.org/MatthieuAmiguet/charmingsnake/src/master/scenes/MA_solo/mugic.py). But of course this is just a suggestion - absolutely no offence if you prefer to stick with purely generative examples.
Cheers,
Matthieu
Le 13.07.26 à 08:24, Alexandros Drymonitis a écrit :