Show us your Victrola and 72rpm records!
![Smilie2 :smilie2:](./images/smilies/e21547.gif)
fine...
I’d like one for home use but not worth the money to me. I agree keeping it simple with paper. I just this year had to get prescription glasses with bifocals. I’m still trying to figure out how to get the angle right for reading music on the stand. Looks like I might have to use a dedicated reader. I had to hold the music way too high to read it at the tuba Christmas.bloke wrote:I've got friends who use these, and I completely understand the technology. I see what they can do, I understand that they can be written on (as if pencil markings), and that pages can be forwarded and reversed with a foot pedal - and all that stuff.
Of course, a large percentage of the reason that people reject new technology is because they don't want to mess with it and another reason is because they're old and set in their ways, but I thought (seriously) about the tablet thing, and I just don't see a ton of advantage.
- First, I'd have to buy a tablet, and for it to be of any use for this application, it would need to be a pretty big tablet - which would cost even more money. (I see some young people using only moderately-large tablets for this application, and the entire font is smaller than on even 8.5 X 11 sheet music. That's probably fine for anyone who can really see well. Even if there are 12x14 tablets that exist, surely they are pretty darn expensive.)
- Next, I would have to buy one of those special folding music stands that supports a tablet. Something tells me they cost more than twenty bucks.
- After that, I would have to buy one of those foot pedal gadgets, and I bet those cost something as well.
- Once I invested the hours to get past the learning curve, I would need to be scanning music into the thing, and putting the scanned pages of all of the various pieces into different folders, labeling them, and such.
- When on gigs, I'd have to be really careful to overcome my natural clumsiness so as to not knock it over and break it, and I don't see how it would be very wise to take it to outdoor gigs where wind could blow the thing over and break it.
- As things are, I already have all of my music, I have some clips if there's wind. If the wind blows it over, it doesn't break. I have scotch tape, and I have scissors - so as to cut pages horizontally in order to do half page turns to eliminate page turns that are too quick.
New technologies are neat, but it just seems to me that the purpose of a new technology is to make things simpler and less expensive. With this technology, I see money, machinery which is somewhat fragile, additionally toting around a music stand which is considerably larger than my currently owned collapsible stand (plus a foot pedal), and time involved in scanning in materials which already exist in another completely usable media.
I can see that quite a few people really enjoy using this new technology, but I think I'm going to just let them enjoy it and continue to do what I've done for sixty years. I just don't see paper music disappearing in my lifetime. I'm also old enough to remember when it was claimed that the primary purpose of computers is to eliminate paper, but what I've seen and what I'm told is that more paper documents are generated then ever before.
bloke "I'M OK; YOU'RE OK" [emoji1]
what software are you using with the chromebook?JESimmons wrote: ↑Fri Jan 06, 2023 4:53 am I bought a refurbished Chromebook on eBay for $50 to test the idea. It works. It’s a little small but readable. I think I still prefer paper, but the Chromebook really helps with the church stuff where we have hundreds of pieces, some loose, some in books. The Chromebook puts them in alphabetical order.
I'm also interested in this. It would seem to be the answer as I already have the Chromebook, plus the ability to display two pages at once solves many issues. I have an iPad with a wireless page turner. But the page turner practice is awkward when flipping back and forth between pages. I either miss the turn or go too far. Or the thing loses connection during a set.JESimmons wrote: ↑Fri Jan 06, 2023 4:53 am I bought a refurbished Chromebook on eBay for $50 to test the idea. It works. It’s a little small but readable. I think I still prefer paper, but the Chromebook really helps with the church stuff where we have hundreds of pieces, some loose, some in books. The Chromebook puts them in alphabetical order.