It came to me yesterday that kibbi might be a female.
689 Feb 10, 2013 2:32 am
Re: Who are some female chipmusic artists? (104 replies, posted in General Discussion)
690 Feb 9, 2013 7:31 pm
Re: Who are some female chipmusic artists? (104 replies, posted in General Discussion)
Bit wish wrote:Im just trying to say some notable female chip artist.
lol
glad someone got the joke.
691 Feb 9, 2013 6:30 pm
Re: Who are some female chipmusic artists? (104 replies, posted in General Discussion)
xX 8 BIT CHAMPION Xx wrote:That was already posted 3 times
and wasnt even funny to begin with
Im just trying to say some notable female chip artist.
693 Feb 9, 2013 7:50 am
Re: Who are some female chipmusic artists? (104 replies, posted in General Discussion)
:3
694 Feb 9, 2013 7:50 am
Re: Who are some female chipmusic artists? (104 replies, posted in General Discussion)
Once we were robots
695 Feb 8, 2013 12:50 am
Re: Where should I buy flashcarts? (56 replies, posted in Nintendo Handhelds)
@ Bit wish, "I like your reply system" <- Sarcasm? I try ro be as clear with these posts as I can. And about the adapter, if I'm gonna get GBA SP it's pretty much "must have". Does the adapters always cost that much?
I would look over what Auxcide wrote, I never bought one of the adapters but the cost of it will eventually beat battery envestments.
696 Feb 7, 2013 10:18 pm
Re: Your thoughts on the chip music community (213 replies, posted in General Discussion)
Why does this thread keep going?
Because there are 50 identicle post as yours.
697 Feb 7, 2013 10:13 pm
Re: Your thoughts on the chip music community (213 replies, posted in General Discussion)
My post was more about relationships between established members of the scene than how newbies are treated...that's an entirely different area. I can say that when I was a newbie, I had nothing but positive experiences when meeting people who were "famous" within the scene. Everyone was super friendly, positive, and generally awesome to talk to. Because of that, I do my very best to keep that same thing going when talking to people who are new to the scene at shows and whatnot (though if you're an asshole I'm probably not going to give you the time of day, regardless of your status in the scene).
My basic point is, there aren't too many trolls in the real life, face to face chip scene, because that shit just generally isn't tolerated.
Its the people between "well known artist" and "Newbies" (the middlemen who are semi-popular) that tend to be trolls and jerks.
698 Feb 7, 2013 2:36 pm
Re: Your thoughts on the chip music community (213 replies, posted in General Discussion)
shiroshii wrote:its shit
/thread
Wizwars wrote:Like most scenes, it's pretty awesome in real life, and for the most part total bullshit on the internet. It's too easy to be a smartass tough guy behind a keyboard and that makes people much more likely to say shit that would get them punched right in the mouth if they said it to someone's face.
There is quite a bit of that, the internet is a brilliant mask
Part of the reason why i'm afraid of going to shows.
699 Feb 6, 2013 10:56 pm
Re: Your thoughts on the chip music community (213 replies, posted in General Discussion)
its shit
what? the sceen? or just this topic? seems like thats somepeoples oppinoins.
700 Feb 6, 2013 9:33 pm
Re: Where should I buy flashcarts? (56 replies, posted in Nintendo Handhelds)
Trust me you'll want to be able to plug headphones/speakers into your handheld device.
+1
701 Feb 6, 2013 9:14 pm
Re: Where should I buy flashcarts? (56 replies, posted in Nintendo Handhelds)
The only thing i dont like about sp's are the speakers, it makes it hard to study the sound, So if you do get one(s), get this: http://www.amazon.com/Gameboy-Game-Adva B002JEUDX4
702 Feb 6, 2013 9:11 pm
Re: Where should I buy flashcarts? (56 replies, posted in Nintendo Handhelds)
No, I am not telling him to do exactly what you are doing. Mother of god, you are like 15 and you just want to feel like you know something and you HURT this scene by spreading misinformation.
The demo ROM is free because it will not save songs to SRAM. It will not save a battery file, so it forces users to either fork out some money for a donation (minimum $0.01 according to the LSDJ site) or to use savestates and not be able to retain savedata on Gameboy hardware. The paid/donated version features saving to SRAM, and is capable of saving songs on hardware. If you read on the LSDJ site you would know that. If you read what people actually wrote you would be faring better in this scene.
Faring better?
703 Feb 6, 2013 9:04 pm
Re: Where should I buy flashcarts? (56 replies, posted in Nintendo Handhelds)
@ Bit Wish, I think im gonna go with demo version until I get the console and flash cart. Thank you anyways!
@ Alpine, got it. Thank you for the sound quality info.
@ thebitman, i might pm you when I have time to try out the demo and I run into probs..
@ nerdsome, Thank you for the info. I finally got answers i really wanted.
Does anyone have personal experience of recording with GBA SP? I got deal today from work. I could change my old Xbox that I don't need, for 2 GBA SP's.
I like your reply system
704 Feb 6, 2013 6:52 pm
Re: Where should I buy flashcarts? (56 replies, posted in Nintendo Handhelds)
Bit wish wrote:You should download bgb and i can pm you my lsdj log on code if you want.
DON'T do this. If you want to do what I did starting out (trying out LSDJ the right way and still keeping my first tracks) check this out:
Download the demo here. http://www.littlesounddj.com/lsd/latest 9_demo.zip You can buy the software for a small donation at www.littlesounddj.com/ when you are ready (as little as $0.01 USD will get you the software). It's easiest to run the software in BGB until you buy a flashcart, if you want to buy one. Until then, you can have different demo files for each song, each with their own save states (since you can't save the songs to a battery file). Later when you download and pay for the real ROM with saving, you can load up the save states on top of the paid ROM, save the song data, and keep your first songs. You can extract and consolidate these songs into a single save file using LSDManager. http://code.google.com/p/lsdmanager/dow n=2&q= it is a little time consuming but well worth it if you are looking to keep your first instruments and other things you may have learned or created through LSDJ.
Don't use someone else's copy of LSDJ, buy it for yourself if you can. If you choose to accept Bit Wish's offer, that's up to you. The method I have suggested for you is how I got started with LSDJ. It's not the only way to start, but it definitely skirts around the "no illegal sharing" clause. Good luck, PM me if you would like more help getting set up.
You dont even have to donate if you want to get it legally, there is no minimal. Is there really any difference from using the demo version from the official version? Your actually telling him to do exactly what i am.