MIDI Port - tradução para Inglês
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MIDI Port - tradução para Inglês

ELECTRONIC MUSICAL INSTRUMENT INDUSTRY SPECIFICATION
MIDI composition; MIDI-2; MIDI file; MIDI File; MIDI compostion; MIDI-THRU; Music Instrument Digital Interface; Musical instrument digital interface; .mid; Standard MIDI File; MID file; .midi; MIDI THRU; MIDI messages; SysEx; Scalable polyphony midi; MIDI 1.0; MIDI usage and applications; MIDI Sequence; .kar; The MIDI 1.0 Protocol; MIDI stream; In, Out, Through; In-Out-Through; Sysex; MIDI port; Midification; SP-MIDI; Musical Instrument Digital Interface; .rmi; Standard MIDI files; MIDI files; MIDI connector; MIDI plug; MIDI control changes; Usb midi; MIDI 2.0; Universal MIDI Packet; MIDI System Exclusive; System Exclusive
  • MIDI files contain sound events such as a finger striking a key, which can be visualized using  software such as [[Synthesia]].
  • Dave Smith (right), one of the creators of MIDI
  • Example of music created in MIDI format
  • The GM Standard Drum Map, which specifies the percussion sound that a given note triggers.
  • A [[sound module]], which requires an external controller (e.g., a MIDI keyboard) to trigger its sounds. These devices are highly portable, but their limited programming interface requires computer-based tools for comfortable access to their sound parameters.
  • MIDI logo from the [[MIDI Manufacturers Association]]
  • Drawing of the MIDI 1.0 connector, showing pins as numbered. Standard applications use only pins 2 (ground) and 4;5 (balanced pair for signal).
  • MIDI 1.0 connectors and MIDI 1.0 cable
  • Two-octave MIDI controllers are popular for use with laptop computers, due to their portability. This unit provides a variety of real-time controllers, which can manipulate various sound design parameters of computer-based or standalone hardware instruments, effects, mixers and recording devices.
  • Using MIDI, a single controller (often a musical keyboard, as pictured here) can play multiple electronic instruments, which increases the portability and flexibility of stage setups. This system fits into a single rack case, but before the advent of MIDI, it would have required four separate full-size keyboard instruments, plus outboard mixing and [[effects unit]]s.
  • Yamaha's [[Tenori-on]] controller allows arrangements to be built by "drawing" on its array of lighted buttons. The resulting arrangements can be played back using its internal sounds or external sound sources, or recorded in a computer-based sequencer.
  • date=17 July 2012 }}". ''richmondsounddesign.com''. Richmond Sound Design, Ltd. 17 July 2012. Web. 17 August 2012</ref>

MIDI port         
MIDI Ausgang, ein Ausgang zur Datenübertragung zwischen elektronischen Musikinstrumenten und dem Computer
MIDI file         
MIDI Datei, Musikdatei die nach dem MIDI Standard kodiert ist
LPT port         
  • [[Accton]] Etherpocket-SP parallel port [[ethernet]] adaptor (circa 1990, [[DOS]] drivers). Supports both coax and 10 Base-T. Supplementary power is drawn from a [[PS/2 port]] passthrough cable.
  • Micro ribbon 36-pin female, such as on printers and on some computers, particularly industrial equipment and early (pre-1980s) personal computers.
  • Mini-Centronics 36-pin male connector (top) with Micro ribbon 36-pin male Centronics connector (bottom)
  • [[Pinout]]s for parallel port connectors.
AN INTERFACE FOR CONNECTING PERIPHERALS TO COMPUTERS, MAINLY USED FOR CONNECTING PRINTERS; WAS REPLACED BY OTHER TECHNOLOGIES LIKE USB AND WLAN
LPT; Line Printing Terminal; LPT port; Parallel interface; Paralell communications; Paralell interface; Lpt port; Parallel interface port; Parallel Port; Printer port; JetIndirect; 0x378; Parallel connector; Parallel printer port; Parallel cable
LPT Ausgang, der DOS-Name für die parallele Schnittstelle für Drucker

Definição

midi system
¦ noun Brit. a set of compact stacking hi-fi equipment components.

Wikipédia

MIDI

MIDI (; Musical Instrument Digital Interface) is a technical standard that describes a communications protocol, digital interface, and electrical connectors that connect a wide variety of electronic musical instruments, computers, and related audio devices for playing, editing, and recording music. The American specification originates in the paper Universal Synthesizer Interface published by Dave Smith and Chet Wood of Sequential Circuits at the 1981 Audio Engineering Society conference in New York City, but the idea was initially from the Acetone,Roland and Korg founder Ikutaro Kakehashi.

A single MIDI cable can carry up to sixteen channels of MIDI data, each of which can be routed to a separate device. Each interaction with a key, button, knob or slider is converted into a MIDI event, which specifies musical instructions, such as a note's pitch, timing and loudness. One common MIDI application is to play a MIDI keyboard or other controller and use it to trigger a digital sound module (which contains synthesized musical sounds) to generate sounds, which the audience hears produced by a keyboard amplifier. MIDI data can be transferred via MIDI or USB cable, or recorded to a sequencer or digital audio workstation to be edited or played back.

A file format that stores and exchanges the data is also defined. Advantages of MIDI include small file size, ease of modification and manipulation and a wide choice of electronic instruments and synthesizer or digitally sampled sounds.: 4  A MIDI recording of a performance on a keyboard could sound like a piano or other keyboard instrument; however, since MIDI records the messages and information about their notes and not the specific sounds, this recording could be changed to many other sounds, ranging from synthesized or sampled guitar or flute to full orchestra.

Before the development of MIDI, electronic musical instruments from different manufacturers could generally not communicate with each other. This meant that a musician could not, for example, plug a Roland keyboard into a Yamaha synthesizer module. With MIDI, any MIDI-compatible keyboard (or other controller device) can be connected to any other MIDI-compatible sequencer, sound module, drum machine, synthesizer, or computer, even if they are made by different manufacturers.

MIDI technology was standardized in 1983 by a panel of music industry representatives, and is maintained by the MIDI Manufacturers Association (MMA). All official MIDI standards are jointly developed and published by the MMA in Los Angeles, and the MIDI Committee of the Association of Musical Electronics Industry (AMEI) in Tokyo. In 2016, the MMA established The MIDI Association (TMA) to support a global community of people who work, play, or create with MIDI.