User Guide
Thank you
for downloading Pocket Beat 3.60!
You can always download the very latest version of Pocket Beat at http://www.aurete.com/pbeat
Contents:
Installation
General Usage
Setlists
Choosing custom voices for beats
Sampled Sound
Press
I want to hear from you!
Installation
Installation is simple! Just HotSync "PBeat.prc"
to your Palm.
Note: If you have an older version of
Pocket Beat with a version number of 2.44 or less, please delete
it from your Palm before installing.
General Usage
Turn sound on/off by pressing your
Palm's menu silkscreen button (or menu key if your Palm has
a keypad) and selecting one of the given sound options. The
menu can also be accessed by tapping on the application title
("Pocket Beat 3.6") in the title bar.
Tip: Turning sound off and going by the Vivid
Visual Tempo Reference is recommended for live situations! Say goodbye
to blowing your ears off with a loud click! The VVTR display
can be picked up in your peripheral vision, especially when using
a color Palm!
Pocket Beat allows for dual tempo settings.
Hardware button icons (beside the "GO/STOP" button)
indicate with a black dot which tempo is selected for playback.
You can select the active tempo by tapping the hardware button
icons, or by pressing the actual up/down buttons on your PDA.
Change a tempo value with the small left/right
arrows (tap them or hold down to increment faster). You can also
click directly on a tempo number to write in your own using graffiti
or Palm keyboard. OR...
Give a count-off! Tap 8 quarter notes
on the drum kit. The drummer will continue your count-off,
and come in on the downbeat of either the 4th or (if the tempo
is 120 or higher) 5th measure.
The shuffle tickboxes cause the "hats"
to be played with triplets not straight eighth notes. (This
only has an affect when sound is on).
Tap the GO/STOP button to toggle playback
Setlists
Pocket Beat 3.5 reads setlist information
from a memo titled "setlist". This makes it easy
to edit your setlist within the Palm Desktop Application and then
HotSync changes to your palm. Of course, you can edit the
setlist memo right on the Palm using the built-in Memo Pad
application.
Note that you may have multiple memos
with variations on the title, "setlist" (such as
"setlist club xyz" but only the memo currently titled
"setlist" - no more, no less - will be read into
Pocket Beat.
1. Creating a sample setlist
Pocket Beat will automaticallty create a sample setlist
memo as a formatting guideline for you to follow. All you
need to do is make sure you don't already have a memo titled
"setlist" already entered into your Palm's Memo
Pad application.
When you start Pocket Beat without
a "setlist" memo already created, the text "+
Setlist" appears in the title bar. Pressing "+Setlist"
will create a "setlist" memo with the proper formatting.
To edit the setlist, or to create your own, simply use your Palm PDA's built-in "Memo Pad" application.
2. The sample setlist memo
Let's take a look at the sample setlist
memo created by Pocket Beat when one doesn't already exist:
-------------------------------------------------------------
setlist
148
All A Game
138
Break Outtro End
152
Get You Down
76
Can't Seem To Find You S
bssbhb
112
Mars Explodes
-------------------------------------------------------------
The first line contains the word "setlist".
This automatically makes the title of the memo "setlist".
Every two lines after this constitute
settings for an additional track in the setlist. The first
of these two lines is the tempo, which must be a whole number.
The second of these two lines contains the song title, followed
optionally by a space and an "S" character. If the
" S" is present after a song title, this signifies
to check the "Shuffle" box when this song is dialed
up which, if sound is enabled, will cause
the beat to be played with eighth note triplets on the "hats".
Each additional song will consist of
another two lines--the tempo line and the song title line.
Note: you can optionally include a third line which contains voice information for custom beat voicing. More on this in a bit. Note that this third line is optional for setlist entries. If you don't want to enter a beat, don't include the third line. Don't insert a a blank line instead of a beat as this will signal the end of the setlist.
There are times when you may want to rearrange the order of a setlist memo with lots of entries, and have only the first few items count for the night's setlist. You can do this by inserting a blank line following the last entry you'd like to be read in the setlist. Any setlist entries following the blank line won't be read in by Pocket Beat, but they will still be there in your memo-- ready to be included next time.
3. Stepping through a setlist
To step through a setlist, just tap
the word "Setlist" in the title bar to advance to
the next song, or press the Palm PDA's Address & To Do buttons to go to the previous and next
songs respectively.
The next song in the list will have
its title show up at the bottom of the display, and have
its tempo dialed up into first tempo slot. (The second tempo
slot is always there for you to enter other tempos into).
You can also change the tempo of the first slot without affecting
the setlist.
Choosing custom voices for beats
Pocket Beat is not a sequencer or drum machine. It is a metronome first and foremost. However, enough users have asked to be able to change the voices for certain beats that I have added this feature.
You can choose which voice (hi hat, snare drum, or bass drum) sounds with each beat, but you can't get any more granular than that. At least, not for the time being.
Practicing in 3/4 or, say, 5/4 or even 11/4 time is now possible though through the addition of this feature. In addition, when audio is off and you are only using VVTR to follow the tempo, the visual highlighting of the bass and snare drum via the superimposed rectanges gives you a visual indication of the audio voices.
Say you want to practice in 7/4 with a bass drum on beats 1, 4 and 7; a snare drum on beats 2 and 5 and a high hat on beats 3 and 6 at a tempo of 165bpm, and the song is called "Mister Seven". The entry for this in the setlist memo would be:
-------------------------------------------------------------
165
Mister Seven
bshbshb
-------------------------------------------------------------
...Where bass drum = 'b', snare drum = 's', and high hat = 'h'
Note that this third line is optional for setlist entries. If you don't want to enter a beat, don't include the third line. Don't insert a a blank line instead of a beat as this will signal the end of the setlist.
As a visual aid you are allowed to insert one space between betters anyhere. So "bshbshb" may also be entered as "bshb shb" (easier seen as a grouping of 4 and a grouping of 3, totalling 7 beats).
With sound off, you can still perceive the effect of chooosing custom beat voices by watching for the superimposed bass drum and snare drum signal rectangles on the Pocket Beat drummer figure.
Cheat Sheets
1. What are they?
One day while learning 16 tunes the night before a rehearsal, I found that I really need to write some cheat notes ... e.g. "4 intro / 4 lead in / 8 verse / ..." So I added functionality to Pocket Beat that would let me look at the cheat notes superimposed under the flashing tempo display!
You can remind yourself about anything-- song structure, lyrics, patterns, chord changes, you name it.
A cheat sheet can be attached to any setlist tune (to every one if need be) and can be a generous (10) lines long.
2. Show me what you mean!
Use of this feature is for registered users only, but to see an example of a Cheat Sheet, have Pocket Beat create its sample setlist and step through the setlist to song #3 (Get You Down). Unregistered users will see text representing a sample Cheat Sheet!
Sampled Sound
Sampled drum sounds are only enabled for devices that I have personally tested. At the time of this writing, these PDAs are: Tungsten C, Tungsten E, Tungsten E2, Tungsten T3, Tungsten T5, Treo 600, Treo 650 (new!), and Zire 71.
However, if your Palm has OS 5 or later yet you are not hearing drums (only beeps), you can try a secret method of forcing drum sounds instead. Email me with your Palm model (e.g. Tungsten Z) for this secret. I will then want to know how smoothly the drum sounds play, especially at high tempos.
Press
Check out this five star review from Computer Shopper U.K. -- Britain's best selling computer magazine! Our Pocket Beat was pitted against 4 other Palm metronomes and reigned supreme!
I want to hear from you!
Pocket Beat is created for you, by a fellow
musician who cares about keeping accurate time and protecting one's
hearing with accessible, affordable technology. I invented the patent-pending
VVTR display feature and integrated it into Pocket Beat so
that we musicians who prefer to keep as accurate time as possible
no longer have to blast an extremely loud click into our eardrums
during rehearsals and performances. Nor is it necessary to shell
out loads of cash for an in-ear-monitor system that doesn't necessarily
offer the flexibility VVTR does.
I also added the setlist feature because
no other Palm metronome I could find offered this either,
and no other metronome, period, that I could find offered
alphanumeric song title display.
So if you have any questions, comments, praise,
etc... I am here to listen to you and take your voice into account!
You can email me at garyduke@idirect.com
or even call me (registered users preferred) at (416) 823-0813!
I look forward to hearing from you!
And if you would like to order a stand
for Pocket Beat, or would like clarification on building your
own stand based on the pictures on the Pocket Beat home page
(http://www.aurete.com/pbeat) please contact me at garyduke@idirect.com
.
Have fun using Pocket Beat!
Best,
Gary Duke
Toronto, ON
(416) 823-0813
Registration:
- Get a lifetime of free upgrades (your
code will register all versions)
- Support Pilot shareware
development
Pocket Beat is a
precision metronome
*Due
to clever programming, Pocket beat is as accurate at the processor
inside the Palm its running on. Sadly, other other Palm OS metronomes
not only fail our our accuracy test, most fail it miserably!
Test the precision of Pocket Beat against other Palm metronomes
for yourself!
Pocket Beat's unique programming makes it
a professional-grade metronome. Not only is it a fantastic, feature-rich
tool for keeping time while playing live performances or while you
practice guitar or other instrument, Pocket Beat can also be employed
for professional studio uses - in place of, or in addition to, a
traditional click track. Other Palm metronomes and sequencers may
claim to keep time, but many are grossly inaccurate. Click
here to learn more, and perform your own accuracy test against Pocket
Beat and other Palm metronomes...
Visit the Pocket Beat website to check for the latest version and
information: http://www.aurete.com/pbeat
Best wishes,
Gary Duke
Email
Gary.
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