Most computers offer multiple interfaces, which at their core are pieces of hardware that allow the computer to communicate to other computers or peripheral devices e.g. Find the dictionaries (see below for a list of popular dictionaries) This is important as we connect our devices together, we need to recognise there are different dictionaries and that we may need to understand each devices dictionary for them to control and interact with each other. For each system or device that supports OSC as an input, there will exist their own name space or “dictionary”. A name space, for those that haven’t read The Postcard (OSC), is the structure of a system or devices functions and parameters laid out as a tree hierarchy. Unlike other protocols such as MIDI, OSC doesn’t have a fixed name space. Whilst this article could be thought of as a guide, its aim is to be more educational in content allowing us to examine the different details necessary to implement such a system. In today’s article we will explore connecting two devices together and communicating via OSC. This is the second article explaining Open Sound Control (OSC) in a series titled Exploring the Network written by field service engineer and programmer Sam Smallman.
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