![]() This behavior means that it is sufficient to say that Linux has a GUI. The point is that most desktop Linux distributions ship by default with a particular window manager and they are often referred to simply as Linux. W – mutes the turntable and allows you to navigate fast to any point in the track (needle-drop stile recueing)Īlt – mute the track with a short press and regain the sound while presedīack space – go to the beginning of the track and stop With the right button you can jump to the other turntable in order to scratch with that one.Įxtra functional buttons are available from the keyboard: If you press middle button you will mute the current turntable. To scratch, press left mouse button and move it left and right. All the control is transferred to the terminatorX. There is no crossfader between the two turntables, but you can mute one or another any time you want.Īttention: in this moment your mouse will no longer act as an usual mouse. Now the two audio files will start to play both in the same time. Put it to Volume.ĭrag and drop two audio files on the two virtual turntables. The X ax is by default for scratchingīut The Y is set to Lowpass. When you press it you can choose the actions for the X and Y axes. ![]() Each turntable has as button named Mouse. There is a virtual turntable opened by default. In order to play with it open the TerminatorX. For putting the parts together I used double sided adhesive strips and magnets. Materials that I used: one old (but functioning) mouse with 3 buttons and ball, an old CD-ROM, an old hard drive, an old keyboard, a CD, a floppy disk and a vinyl record. When you spin the plate the mouse will detect it and will send the information to the software. The turntable consists of 3 parts: -a mouse with ball and 3 buttons (NOT an optic one)įunctioning: The spinning plate rests with one edge on the mouse’s rollers and they will spin together. Left for grab (and scratch), middle for mute the current virtual turntable and right button for change to next turntable. Also each of the three buttons has a specific function. Usually I use one ax for scratching and the other one for volume control. The software is designed to use the movement of the mouse on the X and Y axes and execute a custom chosen action. It is in the repositories, so it is very easy to install. I have tried it in Ubuntu and worked fine. The first think you should know is that TerminatorX runs on Linux.
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