- cross-posted to:
- linux@lemmy.world
- linuxprepperpodcast
- cross-posted to:
- linux@lemmy.world
- linuxprepperpodcast
cross-posted from: https://discuss.online/post/34698756
Didn’t realize this was actually a John Cage composition.
Is this music for binary people?
An old computer trick / prank / “fun” thing to do was piping random things to
/dev/audio, or finding whatever program was available that could take any old file and not complain while translating it to audio by some means or another.On my distro there are at least three of these programs installed by default:
aplay,paplayandpw-play.Some or all of these will complain if the file or stream they’re given isn’t a recognisable audio file, in which case, there’s a
--rawor similar flag where it’ll just shrug and blast whatever through the sound system. If you’re creative, you can set different sample rates and hear it at different speeds.VLC is just a really fancy way of doing the same thing.
For even more “fun”, try opening a file in Audacity / Tenacity, which will default to raw mode if it can’t tell what a file is, and you get to see the waveform and so on. Just take care not to modify and save over an important file with that.
When the game 7th Guest came out (though I’m sure there were others) it was on a mixed CD, part soundrack audio and part game data. But if you had an older CD playing stereo that didn’t block track zero, you could listen to the data. It was early EDM for the crowd that listened to modem handshakes for fun.
Data is garbage until you define its structure and what it is supposed to represent, and there’s nothing stopping something from interpreting it as something else, we do it all the time in progranming as type casting. The same piece of data can be just a normal integer to one function, while it’s a text character to another.
I think you can play DVDs ripped into .iso in VLC. You need to remap the extension to open from whatever application you have for mounting the iso as a disk.



