Feeling in dire need of more chaotic music making. Thinking about setting up Orca on my mostly unused Pi to control my hardware gear.
I believe I already tried this long ago and miserably failed, but I can't remember what happened precisely. Probably something about MIDI output I couldn't figure out.
OMG it just worked :) I had to mess a bit with the command line and figure out the dependencies, but I have a basic beat playing on the Rytm.
For some reason I have no grid displayed in my terminal. It's here, but not visible unless I select it with the mouse. I guess I should maybe install something fancier than the LXDE terminal? What would work best for Orca?
cc @neauoire
@ice I used orca on pi, so if you need help, poke me!
@narF Thanks, I'll take a closer look and see if I can handle it this time, then cry for help if I don't :)
@ice lemme know if you need a hand setting up portmidi.
@neauoire Sure :)
@ice I'm glad to hear! :D
I'm not sure, you'll have to do tests, I've never used dietPi, and I usually use the uxn graphical version of uxn on I'm sure you'll figure out something that works well.
@neauoire No problem, I'll see what other terminal I can install -- this one is the default and it seems to be super lightweight, I'll look into other options! I'll try the uxn version a bit later :)
@cancel Great, now I can see my grid, thanks :)
@zvava It looks interesting but yeah, a bit complicated for what I had in mind. I'll bookmark this for another Linux install though, thanks!
So far I've:
- Found my Pi 4 in my unsufferable mess of cables and forgotten treasures
- Also found the keyboard, the mouse, the screen and my old MIDI adapter (which is bigger than the Pi)
- Booted it but everything looked kind of broken and slow
- Burnt and installed the latest DietPi version
- Managed to set up a working Wi-Fi connection
- Installed LXDE and Firefox
It seems to boot just fine. I'm now about to setup the terminal version of Orca and see what happens.