Zef wrote:Yes it is a 4 bit system, and but using 1 of 4 channels still doesn't make it 1 bit.
I don't believe I ever said anything like that.
Zef wrote:And even if you limited yourself to one volume level for that channel it likely still wouldn't end up as true 1 bit.
If you stick to one volume level, and the level you choose is either 1, 2, 4, or 8, from my understanding (correct me if I'm wrong), the Gameboy's soundchip will use only one specific bit to output sound. I am hesitant to see how that cannot, in the very least, be described as 1-bit music.
Zef wrote:Someone could probably program the gameboy to output in beeper fashion, and but I wouldn't be convinced by anything coming from lsdj.
I don't really see how that would change anything; two different pieces of software that use the hardware in the same manner still use the the hardware in the same manner.
Delek wrote:There IS a problem, because it is an ambiguous term, "x-bit music" already exist to describe the music done with certain CPU word size (8 bits CPUs, 16 bits CPUs, etc), I think that 1bit-depth music is a better term for this type of stuff.
Very true; "1-bit-depth" music is a term much more apt for describing the music this thread is inquiring about. I however feel that, because "1-bit music" is such an ambiguous term, using it in this situation could easily be acceptable. The soundchip is outputting the music through only one of its bits, creating music that is one-bit. Forgive me if there is some standardized definition of the term that I am currently unaware of.