Brings NetMD Devices to the Web
Live @ https://stefano.brilli.me/webminidisc/.
How it works @ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Frs8qhw0g9Y.
Blogpost @ https://stefano.brilli.me/blog/web-minidisc/
Requires Chrome or any other browser that supports both WASM and WebUSB
it just works ® ... no need to download or install any software.
Follow the instructions here https://github.com/glaubitz/linux-minidisc/tree/master/netmd/etc to grant your user access to the device. If you skip this step you'll likely get an Access denied message when trying to connect.
The Windows USB stack requires a driver to be installed to communicate with any USB device. The bad news is that there are no official Windows 10 drivers for NetMD devices. The good news is that we don't need it! We can just use a generic driver like WinUSB to access the device.
You can find installation instruction here, but the easiest way to install is to use Zadig.
Note: you'll need to restart your browser after installation.
- Where to start -> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MiniDisc
- Community -> https://www.reddit.com/r/minidisc/
This project was bootstrapped with Create React App, so you can run:
npm start
to start the development servernpm build
to build for production
WASM modules are provided in the public/
directory. However, if you wish to build those binaries yourself, instructions are provided in the extra/
directory.
Every contribute is welcome but, please, reach out to me before working on any PR. I've built this app mainly for personal use and I wish to keep it as light as possible in terms of features.
There might be plenty of them, for sure :) . The thing is that I've not the time to fix all of them and to make sure this app works on every browser or device.
The best way to get a bug fixed, a feature implemented, or a device supported, is to fork the project and do it for yourself. I'll try to provide support as best as I can.
A few weeks ago I've found my old MZ-N710 in the basement of my parents' house.
Determined to make it work on my modern Mac, after some googling, I found out about the linux-minidisc project. They've done an amazing job in reversing the NetMD protocol.
After a quick inspection to the source code I realized the project could be easily ported to javascript (either node and the browser) using the WebUSB api, so I created netmd-js. Then, on top of that I've built Web MiniDisc to manage the music on my device without the need of downloading and installing any dedicated software.
That's it. It was a LOT of fun :).
- FFmpeg and ffmpegjs, to read audio files (wav, mp3, ogg, mp4, etc...).
- Atracdenc, to support atrac3 encoding (lp2, lp4 audio formats).
- Emscripten, to run both FFmpeg and Atracdenc in the browser.
- netmd-js, to send commands to NetMD devices using Javascript.
- material-ui, to build the user interface.
- linux-minidisc, to build the netmd-js library.