With the Capacitive Touch HAT from Adafruit, turning practically anything into a sound machine seems fairly easy. The board is attached to the top of a Raspberry Pi unit. The HAT adds 12 channels of capacitive touch sensing. Connect an Alligator clip to the board with the other end clipped to a conductive object, like a piece of metal.
Then, by telling Python on Raspberry Pi to talk to the sensor you will know when someone has touched the object.
Nine of the fruits are the sound channels, which playback the programmed MIDI effects when touched, and three control the tones and change the instruments. The result is a truly unique food experience.
I imagine that everyone one of us has, at least once in our lives, has picked up a melon and given it a good slap or two, pretending it is a drum. What if you thumped on a cantaloupe and it actually made a real drum sound?
It may not be practical, but is sure is interesting. Plus, once you’ve played Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 21 in C major, you can make a delicious fruit salad to share with the audience.
via Raspberry Pi
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