gls@odyssey.att.COM (Col. G. L. Sicherman) (01/03/91)
I have posted the source of my "music" program to comp.sources.unix. The program plays music on an AT&T 6386 WGS running System V/386 (T.M.). In its present state it is just a quick hack, improvised after I got hold of the Administrator's Manual. It is still versatile enough to amuse or annoy people for hours on end, especially if you run it in a loop. I have no idea whether it will run on other 80386 boxes running other kinds of *nix. Send your comments, inquiries, and stinkbombs to gls@ odyssey.ATT.COM (which is me). -:- E pao, e pedro, E o fin' do caminho ... -- Col. G. L. Sicherman gls@odyssey.att.COM
src@scuzzy.in-berlin.de (Heiko Blume) (01/04/91)
gls@odyssey.att.COM (Col. G. L. Sicherman) writes: >I have posted the source of my "music" program to comp.sources.unix. >The program plays music on an AT&T 6386 WGS running System V/386 (T.M.). i use the ansi music program to change the bell on my 386, so i won't wake up my girl at 4am ;-) that is, if you play a note and then kill it (the prgm!), the last played note becomes the standard beep on that (virtual) terminal. choose different notes for all terminals :-) i know it works on xenix and interactive, but any decent ansi terminal should do it too. -- Heiko Blume <-+-> src@scuzzy.in-berlin.de <-+-> (+49 30) 691 88 93 public source archive [HST V.42bis]: scuzzy Any ACU,f 38400 6919520 gin:--gin: nuucp sword: nuucp uucp scuzzy!/src/README /your/home
gls@odyssey.att.com (Col. G. L. Sicherman) (01/06/91)
I haven't seen the "ANSI music program," but anyway ... if my code doesn't make it to your node, you're welcome to write me for it -- at your own risk. The folks I work with have been begging for super- user privileges so they can shut off "The Rocky Road to Dublin." -:- "The identical is equal to itself, since it is different." --Franco Spisani -- Col. G. L. Sicherman gls@odyssey.att.COM