According to my web server's log files, many visitors to this site are looking for something that's not actually here. If you're one of them, the following hints will hopefully point you in the right direction.
At college, I created the Princeton Yamaha SY22 Sysex Patch Dump Repository. Unfortunately, Princeton appears to have taken it offline since then. That's a shame, since I still use my SY22 all the time, and I don't have any backups of the archive. Here is the bank of voices I currently have in the synth.
An early version of my NetMIDI proposal once had some broad exposure. While that whitepaper is no longer online, implementations of the protocol are available from my MIDI Utilities pages.
My old school projects are no longer online, although information is available upon request. These include Sol-fa, So Good, computer recognition of musical hand signals using video recognition and sensor glove techniques; Nifty, an exploration of human-computer interfaces for musical notation and sequencing; and Parmix, an audio compositor for massively parallel processors.
I used to host my sister Julia's web site. She lost interest in it, so it's no longer online.
One of the very first things I ever had on my web site was information about the theremin, an unusual electronic musical instrument which I once tried to build (with limited success). By now, many other web sites provide better information on the subject; Theremin World seems to be popular.
I am not the Dave Slomin who is the frontman for the band Mr. Henry. Although he's supposedly a cousin from an estranged side of the family, we've never met. On a related note, the Slomin's company, which provides security and HVAC services in the New York metropolitan area, is from that same estranged side of the family. Alarmo is not my alter-ego.

Still haven't found what you're looking for? Try a search at AltaVista, where I used to work, or at Google.
dgslomin (at) alumni (dot) princeton (dot) edu
last updated 2003-02-20