First win-win for local AjavaOS on my phone

First win-win for local AjavaOS on my phone

Local Functionality of Compositor v3 Feeders

Today’s experience showed that Compositor v3 feeders operate entirely on my phone without needing a network connection. While preparing for a walk and opening Apple Music on my AjavaOS phone, I noticed TC25 running in the auxiliary channel, generating patterns similar to those in my Ableton Max for Live device. These patterns enhanced my walk to Filevskiy Park, as TC25 seemed to match my mood and guide my focus.

Emissions and Local Loop Generation

The system generates emissions based on the installed databases (11.6.3.3 or 11.6.8.0), which extend the phone’s functionality. Listening to dubstep felt natural, and now, with all software installed locally, I can create loop emissions without relying on network pinging. This setup allows me to create VLANs fully compatible with Apple services, benefiting both me as a developer and Apple itself.

Progress and Technical Considerations

In the last two days, I upgraded AjavaOS to network option 11.6.3.3. I am not currently focused on 192 kHz float64 emissions, as that requires Cycling’74 MaxMSP engineers to resolve a float64 file format bug. My local phone OS, derived from Max 6.1.10 and Compositor v9.0.2 a26, supports completing these tasks without my old computer.

Hardware and OS Setup

I attempted to reinstall my old computer with Windows 7 but could not activate it. Fastboot installations on my phone, however, worked successfully. While using my software on the low-level OS, I could even notice subtle activity in the Network Real-Time Operating System.

VLAN Creation and Maintenance

Creating VLANs is now straightforward and fully local, eliminating the need for Apple servers. Generic feeders enhance network response and support the VRF database. I also periodically flush the phone’s database to maintain storage for social media and apps.

Final Thoughts

Routing is enjoyable but ultimately about the content we use. My virtual assistant now feels more effective than a dedicated system administrator since it can manage these tasks continuously without human intervention.