Steve-

>>>>> El 05/08/10 14:50, Tim Nelson escribió:
>>>>>> ----- "michel freiha"<mich...@gmail.com>   wrote:
>>>>>>> Dear Sir,
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I tried to convert ilbc to ulaw and get the same result...Bad Voice
>>>>>> Quality
>>>>>>> Regards
>>>>>>>
>>>>>> Again, iLBC is poor quality to begin with. You can't take a poor audio
>>>>>> sample and make it better by converting it to a codec with better
>>>>>> 'resolution'. An audio sample full of robot voice is going to sound
>>>>>> like the same robot voice even if you transcode it to a better quality
>>>>>> codec, whether that is G.729, G.711u, or the latest 'HD Voice' codecs.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> --Tim
>>>>> This just made me remember some comment on the iax.conf sample file...
>>>>>
>>>>> disallow=lpc10            ; Icky sound quality...  Mr. Roboto.
>>>> LPC10 is a very old codec, from early 1980s.  LPC10 doesn't do a good job 
>>>> with pitch detection so it tends to have
>>>> a
>>>> 'robotic' sound.  With advent of MELPe, anyone needing bitrates 2400 or 
>>>> less should not be using LPC10.
>>>>
>>>> -Jeff
>>> MELPe is patent encumbered,
>> Not if used for govt/defense purposes.  For commercial-only purposes, TI 
>> will waive royalty fees if their chip is
>> used
>> in the product.  It would have been nice if Digium had considered the many 
>> advantages of using a DSP pioneer such as
>> TI before putting a Mindspeed chip on their TC400B card.
>
> I think all the IP for MELP is now in the hands of Compandent, and TI no
> longer has the ability to waive royalties.

That is not correct.  Compandent has filed copyrights on certain files 
associated with a C549 chip assembly language
implementation they did under contract to NSA around 2001.  TI has patent 
rights on 2400 bps, TI + Microsoft on 1200
bps, and TI + Microsoft + Thales Group on 600 bps.  Microsoft's IP came about 
as a result of acquiring a company
called SignalCom around 2001.  If the noise pre-processor is used, then there 
is some AT&T IP.  To verify this, you
can search dsprelated.com (specifically, look for posts discussing this issue 
on comp.dsp), and you can also read the
"Compandent IPR" section of the MELPe Wikipedia page
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mixed_Excitation_Linear_Prediction).  That 
section was authored by the Compandent's
founder, Oded Gottesman.  Oded is a super sharp, very hard working guy.

Compandent also claims a copyright on some C code in the file melp_syn.c 
(synthesis filter).  I have read discussions
by DSP experts indicating the copyrighted section of code can be implemented in 
alternative ways, but Oded may say
that's not accurate.

> Either way, government use
> and use with TI silicon are two niches that might work out well, and
> everything else is a problem for several more years. If you are going to
> pay royalties for a low bit rate codec, IMBE is probably a better option.

I would disagree because IMBE source is not available.  MELPe source is 
available and can be downloaded online.

> TI is a good option, but what do you have against Mindspeed? Choosing a
> good option for this kind of card is mostly about managing the patent
> licence fees. I assume Mindspeed gave Digium the best option for doing
> that, within Digium's volume constraints.

My understanding in talking to Digium engineers at Globalcom and other trade 
shows back in 2006 is they were worried
about interfacing the TI TNET series devices over the PCI bus.  They would have 
needed an FPGA with some non-trivial
logic programming, so I understand their decision.  But if they had got past 
their FPGA "writer's block", they could
have put one TNETV3010 chip on there, even smaller than the Mindspeed and 
without the heat sink, and had twice the
channel capacity as they do now.

>>> so there is still a place for LPC10 [...]
e>> I haven't seen an LPC10 implementation with MOS higher than 2.5.  Due to 
its age and expiration of patents, LPC10
>> might be a basis for a 2400 bps open source codec.  But enormous improvement 
>> would be needed to come close to MELPe
>> performance.
>>
>>
> MELPe is definitely a compandent thing, and TI cannot waive fees for
> that. MELP and MELPe are derived from LPC10. Any attempt to improve
> LPC10 would take you down a similar road, though you would need to skirt
> around the patents.

Again, not correct.  Suggest to research the many online independent sources, 
or contact NSA (who initiated the
overall MELPe effort in the 1990s, in response to a need to significantly 
improve over LPC10) and who can give you a
complete IP list.

> Do you really consider MELPe to be an enormous improvement over LPC10?
> Its still pretty lousy compared to a number of options at about 5kbps,
> and RTP overheads mean the gain from going lower than 5k isn't that big.
> The main reason LPC10 and MELPe offer a low bit rate in RTP is the
> minimum packet you can pack 22.5ms frames into sanely is a 90ms one.

In MOS terms, yes.  In VoIP terms, I agree it's not clear cut.  At 2400 bps, a 
90 msec packet would be 27 payload
bytes.  For IP/UDP/RTP usage, that much delay could well be counterproductive.  
Places where I have seen MELPe
effectively used for VoIP include applications where multiple channels are sent 
in one packet stream, non-Ethernet
based channels (much less overhead, for example low bandwidth satellite 
connections), and combining voice and
associated data into payloads.

> 90ms RTP *really* cuts the overheads, compared to the more typical 20ms
> or 30ms packets used for G.729.
>
> As others have mentioned, David Rowe is working on a modern 2400bps
> codec. He did a burst of work some time ago, and then put it aside while
> busy with other things. He recently told me he is restarting the work,
> and he wants to get that codec into good shape before the end of this year.

Yes, it's an ambitious project!  I've read about what David's trying to do and 
I hope he is successful.

-Jeff


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