Networking a Grand Piano Durango CO

PianoDisc has set up a file server with a few of these songs that demonstrate the powerful feature that an Internet library of music can add to their piano. Instead of purchasing individual shrink-wrapped piano CDs or floppies, one could download the songs directly to the piano and purchase them by credit card from the office computer.

Watchman Computer Services, Inc.
303-416-3050
110 16th Street
Denver, CO
Viceroy Consulting L.L.C.
(303) 788-1517
7100 E Belleview Ave Ste 201
Greenwood Village, CO
ROI TEKPARTNER
303794-4987
2001 E. Easter Ave
Centennial, CO
Techno-Doctor, LLC
(719) 566-7790
2022 S. Pueblo Blvd.
Pueblo, CO
ANCHOR NETWORK SOLUTIONS, INC
303904-0494
9233 Park Meadows Dr, Suite 422
Lone Tree, CO
Information Technology Experts, Inc. (ITX)
970-282-7333
2120 S. College Avenue
Fort Collins, CO
Comcast of Colo., LLC
(719) 562-3011
807 N. Greenwood
Pueblo, CO
C SQUARED COMPUTER CONSULTING
303933-1113
7779 W Phillips Ave
Littleton, CO
Amnet
719-442-6683
219 W Colorado Ave
Colorado Springs, CO
7 Layers Consulting
(866) 275-4601
7379 S Gore Range Rd
Littleton, CO
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Networking a Grand Piano

During the last seven years that I have been reviewing, selling, installing, and supporting home networking products I rarely come across a product that exemplifies the benefits and enhanced enjoyment of a connected home as well as the grand piano that I gave my wife for Christmas retrofitted with the Opus7 Music System from PianoDisc.

The Opus7 Music System, released in 2004, adds a silent Linux-based computing platform attached to the underside of any grand piano. Opus7 supports two primary file types: MIDI and MX3 (compressed digital audio and MIDI in the same file). The piano is always controlled by the MIDI component of the file and there are two separate forms of accompaniment. Symphony accompaniment is generated via MIDI messages sent to the internal SymphonyPro sample-based MIDI synthesizer. The SymphonyPro synthesizer can provide up to 128 different sampled instrument sounds. Additionally, live (recorded) music can accompany MX3 playback. The live music can consist of vocals and other sounds not available via the SymphonyPro. Both of these audio enhancements to the piano acoustics are amplified and sent to the stereo speakers also attached to the underside of the piano.

The computing platform has a wired 10/100 ethernet connection or a bridged 802.11b wireless connection to connect the piano wired or wirelessly to the home network switch backbone. Now one can control the songs played on the piano from any browser-connected workstation in the home, whether that be a desktop, a laptop, or one of the newer touchscreen web-tablets or smart displays. In addition, since the piano is connected to the home network one can move MIDI songs from an office computer onto the Opus7 Music system for piano playback or take songs that have been played and recorded on the piano hard drive and move them back to the office computer.

The fact that the Opus7 Music system is attached to the home network (and therefore to a broadband Internet connection) means that it can now download piano MIDI files directly from the Internet for playback at home. PianoDisc has set up a file server with a few of these songs that demonstrate the powerful feature that an Internet library of music can add to their piano. Instead of purchasing individual shrink-wrapped piano CDs or floppies, one could download the songs directly to the piano and purchase them by credit card from the office computer. Or, imagine a monthly audio subscription service like those offered by MusicMatch or Listen.com for Piano MIDI files. You can envision how all of those grand pianos (that often sit idle in our clients homes) can suddenly be brought to life!

Last, but not least, one can connect the audio output of the piano plus symphonic orchestration to a whole-house music distribution system. The same beautiful music one hears directly from the piano inside the house can now be heard from the backyard deck or patio speaker system.

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