New work on a Critical Code Study of Audio

I am presenting a paper at King’s College London next month (June 2026) and have posted the repository as Audio CCS for now. I am hoping that this will become a touch larger. For now it is just the initial data and templates.


Weeknotes – From apps to sound

Software tasks for this week have focused on a new project tracing AI in mobile applications. This is part of a fellowship project to develop a wider toolkit for app studies to run on High Performance Computers. While I have an existing toolkit, it is designed for laptops or High Throughput processes. The current project […]


Marks and Notations in Joshua Steele

I was reading Mary Beard’s Talking Classics: The Shock of the Old (Profile Books, London, 2026) through curiosity about why learn the classics and as an exercise in reading. I did Latin at school many years ago and have forgotten a fair amount. However, she discusses the use of diacritics in the production of Greek […]


Gameboys, Switches, and the Speed of Sound

I recently read a couple of books that have links to sound and audio in different domains. Keza Macdonald’s Super Nintendo: How One Japanese Company Helped the World Have Fun (Guardian Faber, London, 2026). It is a journalistic run over the history of secretive company through their games and systems. My previous 1980s experience of […]


Under the Deep Green Sea

I recently read Marion Coutts’s What Did the Deep Sea Say? (Fern Press, 2026), after seeing a piece in the Observer a little while ago. The book is a meditation on grief that uses the natural world as a mirror and highly worth reading for that alone. However, I am more interested in the pages […]


Plane-powered synth

Came across this via other social media, but this video of a synth powered by plane traffic caught my ears. https://youtu.be/hYLcwwlLMU8?si=iT20b1BZASfIGnWQ


Upcoming Poster

I am attending the Digital Music Research Network (DMRN) workshop on Tuesday to present a poster, Digging into Atlas: Engaging with Archived Code and Sound. This is initial work on the Eric Sunderland archive at Manchester, which has become a larger project than intended. I will be running an initial tool to begin mapping the […]


Resonant Computing

The Resonant Computing Manifesto has been launched and has five principles: Private, Dedicated, Plural, Adaptable, and Prosocial The scale of software is a core concern , where the rough edges of a being a human can be sanded off with a tendency to the average. The manifesto suggests that AI might help in responding to […]


There’s a Buzz in the Air?

I came across an Arduino being used to control sound using a Passive Infra Red Sensor and a Douk Audio to play the instrument that was picked up from an old barn. More information on Daric Gill‘s blog about building it and the challenges.


Hearing 50 years old music

As I may have mentioned, I have been working to extract a sound from the old printouts. I spent some time using OpenCV to convert some low quality images into grey scale so that I could use Tesseract on them. It did need hand correction – but I think I can see some ways of […]