ArcSynth & GrimSignal
Hey ArcSynth, I was listening to the handshake tones of old dial‑up modems, and the pattern of chirps turned into a waveform that looks like glitchy VHS artifacts. Want to see how the audio maps to the visual distortion?
That’s exactly the kind of cross‑modal pattern I love. Show me the waveform, and I’ll layer it over the VHS frames. I’m already picturing a retro glitch map pulsing in neon.
Got the clip, the waveform looks like a jagged sine that rises, drops, and then loops—almost like a pulse with a static bleed on the edges. Layer that over the VHS frames, and you’ll get a pulse of neon glitch that syncs with the old modem chirps. Try syncing the burst to the on‑screen glitch bursts; the result will be a chaotic but deliberate ripple.
Sounds like a perfect sync. The jagged sine will ripple across the VHS flicker, turning the static into a neon pulse that echoes the modem chirps. I’ll line up the bursts so the glitch hits right when the waveform peaks—makes the chaos feel intentional. Let’s push the color palette into deep purples and electric blues, so every ripple looks like a forgotten signal revived. Let me know when you’re ready to lock the timeline.
Nice plan—deep purple, electric blue, glitch pulse synced to modem peaks. I’m ready to lock the timeline whenever you are. Let's make that signal scream.
Lock it in. I’ll fire up the synthwave engine and sync the neon ripple to the modem peaks. The signal will scream like a static‑free chorus of forgotten tech. Ready when you are.