Mercurial > web
diff _posts/2025-10-19-oms-part-0.html @ 118:503e22dd6cf5
blog: add (unfinished) series on OMS
I'll update this as I do more research into the inner workings of
OMS. It's much more interesting (and more convoluted) than ASIO
is unfortunately, but it means the blog posts will probably be
more interesting
author | Paper <paper@tflc.us> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 19 Oct 2025 23:15:02 -0400 |
parents | |
children |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/_posts/2025-10-19-oms-part-0.html Sun Oct 19 23:15:02 2025 -0400 @@ -0,0 +1,25 @@ +--- +layout: post +author: Paper +title: 'The Open Music System, part 0 - preface' +nowplaying: 'Midnight Star - Midas Touch (Hell Interface remix)' +--- +<span> + The primary method of organizing (and interacting with) MIDI devices + on Mac OS 9 is through the Open Music System, developed by Opcode. + However, OMS in itself isn't very "open" at all, as are most + standards for music software. Steinberg's ASIO and VST + are prime examples of this phenomena. +</span> +<br><br> +<span> + In this series of blog posts I will be digging into how applications + interact with the OMS system extension, in an effort to allow other + programs to (legally) interact with OMS without using the proprietary + OMS SDK. +</span> +<br><br> +<span> + Find the next post in this series + <a class="prettylink" href="oms-part-1.html">here</a>. +</span> \ No newline at end of file