9.15
Keynote #1 Audio and the Web - Chris Wilson
###Session Moderator: Raphaël Troncy
10.30
Building a Collaborative Digital Audio Workstation Based on the Web Audio API - Jan Monschke
10.50
DAW Plugins for Web Browsers - Jari Kleimola
11.10
Meyda: an Audio Feature Extraction Library for the Web Audio API - Hugh Rawlinson, Nevo Segal, and Jakub Fiala
11.30
Web Audio Tools - Jordan Santell
11.50
Adventures in Scheduling, Buffers and Parameters: Porting a Dynamic Audio Engine to Web Audio - Chinmay Pendharkar, Peter Bäck, and Lonce Wyse
12.10
Audio Oriented UI Components for the Web Platform - Victor Saiz, Benjamin Matuszewski, and Samuel Goldszmidt
12.30
Of Time Engines and Masters — An API for Scheduling and Synchronizing the Generation and Playback of Event Sequences and Media Streams for the Web Audio API - Norbert Schnell, Victor Saiz, Karim Barkati, and Samuel Goldszmidt
14.00
Keynote #2 The First Computer Music Programming Language - Chris Lowis
MUSIC was a programming language developed by Max Mathews at Bell Labs in 1957. In this talk we'll learn more about Max Mathews, the origins of computer music, and by building a compiler for MUSIC in JavaScript hear what some of the very first computer music compositions sounded like.
Chris Lowis is an invited expert on the W3C's Audio Working group. He studied acoustics and signal processing at the Institute of Sound and Vibration Research in Southampton, and recently worked at the R&D department at the BBC. He loves to use the Web Audio API to bring old synthesisers back to life, and to write about audio on the web in his newsletter Web Audio Weekly.
14.45 - 16.15
Languages & Environments | Session Moderator: Matthew Paradis
14.45
Can Web Audio be Liberated from the Von Neumann Style? - Emilio Jesús Gallego Arias
15.05
Extending Csound to the Web - Victor Lazzarini, Edward Costello, Steven Yi, and John Ffitch
15.25
BRAID: A Web Audio Instrument Builder with Embedded Code Blocks - Benjamin Taylor and Jesse Allison
15.45
Interactive Music with Tone.js - Yotam Mann