Piano Hands?

Piano Hands?
Posted on: 27.09.2008 by Nick Ross
From Engadget:



For all you OCD desk tappers out there, I Want One Of Those is offering up -- ta da -- Piano Hands. These electronic gloves with built-in sensors at the fingertips emulate musical notes upon tapping any flat surface. With eight different instruments to choose from, we can't believe of a better way to be endlessly annoying on elevators, airplanes, trains and other cramped enclosed spaces -- assuming you can find a place to plug in your Marshall Stack. Pick up your ticket to stardom for just
Nick Ross
27.09.2008
From Engadget:



For all you OCD desk tappers out there, I Want One Of Those is offering up -- ta da -- Piano Hands. These electronic gloves with built-in sensors at the fingertips emulate musical notes upon tapping any flat surface. With eight different instruments to choose from, we can't believe of a better way to be endlessly annoying on elevators, airplanes, trains and other cramped enclosed spaces -- assuming you can find a place to plug in your Marshall Stack. Pick up your ticket to stardom for just
Nick Ross
27.09.2008
From Engadget:



For all you OCD desk tappers out there, I Want One Of Those is offering up -- ta da -- Piano Hands. These electronic gloves with built-in sensors at the fingertips emulate musical notes upon tapping any flat surface. With eight different instruments to choose from, we can't believe of a better way to be endlessly annoying on elevators, airplanes, trains and other cramped enclosed spaces -- assuming you can find a place to plug in your Marshall Stack. Pick up your ticket to stardom for just
Nick Ross
27.09.2008
From Engadget:



For all you OCD desk tappers out there, I Want One Of Those is offering up -- ta da -- Piano Hands. These electronic gloves with built-in sensors at the fingertips emulate musical notes upon tapping any flat surface. With eight different instruments to choose from, we can't believe of a better way to be endlessly annoying on elevators, airplanes, trains and other cramped enclosed spaces -- assuming you can find a place to plug in your Marshall Stack. Pick up your ticket to stardom for just
Nick Ross
27.09.2008
From Engadget:



For all you OCD desk tappers out there, I Want One Of Those is offering up -- ta da -- Piano Hands. These electronic gloves with built-in sensors at the fingertips emulate musical notes upon tapping any flat surface. With eight different instruments to choose from, we can't believe of a better way to be endlessly annoying on elevators, airplanes, trains and other cramped enclosed spaces -- assuming you can find a place to plug in your Marshall Stack. Pick up your ticket to stardom for just
Nick Ross
27.09.2008
From Engadget:



For all you OCD desk tappers out there, I Want One Of Those is offering up -- ta da -- Piano Hands. These electronic gloves with built-in sensors at the fingertips emulate musical notes upon tapping any flat surface. With eight different instruments to choose from, we can't believe of a better way to be endlessly annoying on elevators, airplanes, trains and other cramped enclosed spaces -- assuming you can find a place to plug in your Marshall Stack. Pick up your ticket to stardom for just
Nick Ross
27.09.2008
From Engadget:



For all you OCD desk tappers out there, I Want One Of Those is offering up -- ta da -- Piano Hands. These electronic gloves with built-in sensors at the fingertips emulate musical notes upon tapping any flat surface. With eight different instruments to choose from, we can't believe of a better way to be endlessly annoying on elevators, airplanes, trains and other cramped enclosed spaces -- assuming you can find a place to plug in your Marshall Stack. Pick up your ticket to stardom for just
Nick Ross
27.09.2008
From Engadget:



For all you OCD desk tappers out there, I Want One Of Those is offering up -- ta da -- Piano Hands. These electronic gloves with built-in sensors at the fingertips emulate musical notes upon tapping any flat surface. With eight different instruments to choose from, we can't believe of a better way to be endlessly annoying on elevators, airplanes, trains and other cramped enclosed spaces -- assuming you can find a place to plug in your Marshall Stack. Pick up your ticket to stardom for just
Nick Ross
27.09.2008
From Engadget:



For all you OCD desk tappers out there, I Want One Of Those is offering up -- ta da -- Piano Hands. These electronic gloves with built-in sensors at the fingertips emulate musical notes upon tapping any flat surface. With eight different instruments to choose from, we can't believe of a better way to be endlessly annoying on elevators, airplanes, trains and other cramped enclosed spaces -- assuming you can find a place to plug in your Marshall Stack. Pick up your ticket to stardom for just
Nick Ross
27.09.2008
From Engadget:



For all you OCD desk tappers out there, I Want One Of Those is offering up -- ta da -- Piano Hands. These electronic gloves with built-in sensors at the fingertips emulate musical notes upon tapping any flat surface. With eight different instruments to choose from, we can't believe of a better way to be endlessly annoying on elevators, airplanes, trains and other cramped enclosed spaces -- assuming you can find a place to plug in your Marshall Stack. Pick up your ticket to stardom for just
Nick Ross
27.09.2008
From Engadget:



For all you OCD desk tappers out there, I Want One Of Those is offering up -- ta da -- Piano Hands. These electronic gloves with built-in sensors at the fingertips emulate musical notes upon tapping any flat surface. With eight different instruments to choose from, we can't believe of a better way to be endlessly annoying on elevators, airplanes, trains and other cramped enclosed spaces -- assuming you can find a place to plug in your Marshall Stack. Pick up your ticket to stardom for just
Nick Ross
27.09.2008
From Engadget:



For all you OCD desk tappers out there, I Want One Of Those is offering up -- ta da -- Piano Hands. These electronic gloves with built-in sensors at the fingertips emulate musical notes upon tapping any flat surface. With eight different instruments to choose from, we can't believe of a better way to be endlessly annoying on elevators, airplanes, trains and other cramped enclosed spaces -- assuming you can find a place to plug in your Marshall Stack. Pick up your ticket to stardom for just
Nick Ross
27.09.2008
From Engadget:



For all you OCD desk tappers out there, I Want One Of Those is offering up -- ta da -- Piano Hands. These electronic gloves with built-in sensors at the fingertips emulate musical notes upon tapping any flat surface. With eight different instruments to choose from, we can't believe of a better way to be endlessly annoying on elevators, airplanes, trains and other cramped enclosed spaces -- assuming you can find a place to plug in your Marshall Stack. Pick up your ticket to stardom for just
Nick Ross
26.09.2008
Originally Posted by mycole
The piano key bracelet thing says classy. I'll add that to my piano key tie and I'm ready for a evening on the town.
omg LOL
Nick Ross
27.09.2008
From Engadget:



For all you OCD desk tappers out there, I Want One Of Those is offering up -- ta da -- Piano Hands. These electronic gloves with built-in sensors at the fingertips emulate musical notes upon tapping any flat surface. With eight different instruments to choose from, we can't believe of a better way to be endlessly annoying on elevators, airplanes, trains and other cramped enclosed spaces -- assuming you can find a place to plug in your Marshall Stack. Pick up your ticket to stardom for just
Xavier Emanuels
03.10.2008
Aww my crazy idea was deleted with the server reset

Oh well here we go again !!

Grab yourself a pair of these, an Oxygen 8 keyboard and a copy of Bomes

Each finger will send out a different midi message on the piano hands and by cross referencing(with Bomes) with which button on the oxygen 8 is pressed, we can give each buttons 10 states, 1 state for each finger you press it with.

Using Bomes its possible to tell which finger is hitting which key as long as your not hitting 2 keys at the same time. With this information we can make each 1 of the 25 buttons on the oxygen 8 send 10 different midi messages. Because each button 10 different possibilities of fingers it can be pressed with and there are 25 keys on the Oxygen 8 this gives us 250 different midi messages.

I don't actually recommend anyone try this unless your up for a laugh

If someone is crazy enough to want to try this, hit me up a message and i will explain in more detail how to do the coding in bomes
gilbert hatem
26.09.2008
I've seen something like this before. But homemade, well it may have been a modded oxy8.
Random X
26.09.2008
LOlz.. would be cool hooking this up to a glitched drum VST or something.
Nick Ross
26.09.2008
Originally Posted by mycole
The piano key bracelet thing says classy. I'll add that to my piano key tie and I'm ready for a evening on the town.
omg LOL
Marcel Ei Gio
26.09.2008
anyone else seeing this as a midi controller?... interesting...
Hannes Deburchgraeve
27.09.2008
The piano key bracelet thing says classy. I'll add that to my piano key tie and I'm ready for a evening on the town.

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