The DJ? A software.

. EMusic

09:01:02 The DJ? A software.
The AI ​​Lab dell'Hewlett-Packard is developing a software that uses the feedback of those who dance to choose the traces of a dj-set. The research project is being conducted in the laboratories of Bristol (England) and coordinated by Dave Cliff (pictured). The program is called hpdj and has been tested in an evening at the Ministry of Sound in London, one of the biggest clubs in Europe, by deceiving a third of the audience that he believed there was a DJ in the flesh to the console. Hpdj is able to perform mixing and fading excellent, thanks to specially developed algorithms, but its unique feature is obtained thanks to a bracelet that is worn by users, able to monitor heart rate, sweating and movement. These wireless data transmissions are compared with a database that classifies songs by drum patterns, bass lines, keyboards and vocals, and choosing the most suitable algorithm according to a 'genetic' which tends to favor the majority. But even in moments of 'tired', the program reacts, trying to increase the bpm of the songs themselves or by varying beats and bass lines, also managing periods of chill-out sequences and bustle. Cliff would also like to provide a final functionality, including the link to the software to a CD burner, so as to give the clubbers out a CD with the set that they themselves have helped to create.