Blogs

Improved quality with melisma and enhanced hyphens

thomas's picture

The lead sheet typesetting on Wikifonia has been improved which resulted in two clear visual changes. First you will notice that Wikifonia has support now for melismas and a second change is the improved hyphen placement. A picture speaks always better than a word so here is an example of before and after:

Wikifonia redesign

thomas's picture
in

Here we are again. It has been a long time since we actually made something public, but as you may have noticed, we redesigned Wikifonia.

The birth of Wikifonia

thomas's picture

It has been more then 2 years now. In fact, there is an exact day when the wikifonia idea popped up. It was February the 26th in Brussels. Tom and I were attending FOSDEM 2005. We probably missed the opening but we were just in time for Jimmy Wales' session, the founder of Wikipedia. The wikiwiki concept wasn't new to us, but the overwhelming facts and figures on the fastest growing encyclopedia of all time clearly demonstrated it wasn't just a hype. The next presentation was brought by Richard Stallman, a very inspiring talk about the history of copyright: Copyright vs. Community in the age of Computer Networks (video - 480 MB). So, how did Wikifonia come into this picture?

In order to answer this question, I have to introduce Benoit, another friend and ex fellow student from the university of Gent. Besides the many class projects we did with the three of us (Tom, Benoit and I), we also shared a love for music and technology. After our studies we kept in contact and met weekly - after swimming - enjoying ourselves behind the computer and our instruments. So, when I called Benoit in the railway station on the way back from FOSDEM, we couldn't stop arguing about a wiki for sheet music. Wouldn't it be great if the music community would be able to create sheet music in the website, using an embedded music notation program and without the fear of doing something illegal?

You’ve got the music in you

wouter's picture

Welcome, dear visitor. Put yourself at ease, pleased to meet you. We are a team originating mostly from Flanders (North of Belgium) and also France. Today, somewhere in Ghent, Belgium, we will drink a glass to celebrate. Today is a big day indeed, since today, we launch Wikifonia.

We stand before you with a novelty -- a product of imagination, if we may say so. Materializing a years-old dream, we step forward to throw ourselves in the global web race. Our child is young, very young: one day. It still needs our nurturing… and yours. Your music it needs, so as to be able to do what it’s good at: publish your music.

Wikifonia is the new online platform where you can publish and collaborate on sheet music. Feel free to visit, at www.wikifonia.org. It has and will cost us many a night of work, but here it is. From now on, every musician can experience what Wikifonia is about. Visitors can browse through sheet music, and download it freely. Registered users can publish music and comment, again for free. The good news: Wikifonia is the prime example in its kind to be legal. Collaborating with author right organization www.musi©opy.nl, Wikifonia compensates the right holders for the copyrighted sheet music you put online.

Today, we reveal Wikifonia to the world, charged with not even hundred sheets. Touch wood!

So we put our faith in Wikifonia. Even better: we put our faith in you. Our child is your pupil. Visit, come around. Publish. Let us know what you think. We feel blessed with the attention drawn already, through the Creativity to Business Award 2005 of AUGent (Flanders), the FlandersDC fellowship (Flanders again) and the article in the Flemish newspaper De Standaard. If you have five minutes: make your day special, and visit us online. You are expected.

Yours truly,
The Wikifonia Team

Syndicate content