join the mailing list!
add | remove


Wednesday December 5th, 2001

Gibson makes music MaGIC at AES gathering

Gibson Labs, the research division of Gibson Guitar Corp. unveiled it's "bleeding-edge," music MaGIC this past weekend at the Audio Engineering Societys (AES) annual convention. MaGIC "propels music tech to (the) Digital Age," says Richard Tanner of TechTV.com.

MaGIC, an acronym for Media-Accelerated Global Information Carrier, "should update the analog technology of the 1920s to today's digital domain," Tanner reports. "Much of the music we listen to and hear live today is produced in analog. The switch to digital has been a laborious process held back by the slow speed on converting signals in and out of the digital realm."

To overcome these technical limitations, Gibson MaGIC modifies the pervasive Ethernet networking protocol to link instruments to the mixer and eventually straight to the listener. The advantages are both a cleaner sound and a simpler setup. While traditional concert setups require multiple cords, Gibson MaGIC carries up to 64 signal channels per cable, thus saving space and time.

"What we have done is called 'middleware,'" says Gibson Chairman and CEO Henry Juszkiewicz who spearheaded MaGIC development. "We have put software on top of Ethernet that basically synchronizes those packets to a master clock and allows it to send many, many channels and have many work stations that work together in synchrony, meaning low latency, meaning music."

"In the past, if you were going to process something with the computer -- let's say a drum hit -- you would hit the drum and the computer would spit it out later," said Gibson Labs chief technologist Nathan Yeakel. "Now, because of minimal latency, people can hear themselves perform, which is very important in a live venue. There is no delay. There is no latency."

Yeakel said the technology could also cut setup time for bands on the road.

"As soon as you plug the guitar in to the Ethernet port or whatever instrument it is, it'll come up 'Nate's guitar,'" Yeakel said. "Just like in Ethernet, when you plug into an Ethernet hub, you're going to see your computer's name on the network. The same works for the guitar, except you won't have to set up any drivers or anything like that. You plug it in, and the mix position knows exactly where you are. It knows your effects, and it knows your sound."

To achieve all these goals took a lot more resources than the guitar maker had in-house. So Juszkiewicz seeded the idea with 12 engineers in its Silicon Valley labs in Sunnyvale, California, in January 1999.

Ultimately Gibson hopes to take MaGIC beyond the stage and studio.

MaGIC was developed as an open standard and will be licensed royalty-free. Gibson already has had discussions with companies like Intel, Sony, Philips, and networking giant Cisco Systems. It hopes its creation will find other applications in the home networking, home automation, and even medical imaging fields.

"By hitching our wagon to Ethernet it's not one point in time... it's a moving target, and it's going to drag us and the musician community into uncharted realms," Juszkiewicz said, adding that for now the focus remains music. However, the company says, don't be surprised to see Ethernet ports on guitars within the near future.

To see more Gibson MaGIC, go here. An evaluation board and developer kit are available now. Go here to order or for more information regarding technology, licensing and product development.


    This is MaGIC   Specification    Evaluation Boards    MaGIC News    See the Video    Contact Us


  

Archives:
  2001
  2000
  1999
  1998
  1997
  1996

Brought to you by Gibson Internet Services   |   © 2001 Gibson Musical Instruments