On 10/28/2022 8:49 AM, Reindl Harald wrote:
well, in the audio-world people can't even distinct between instruments and
playback, otherwise the nonsense of "sounding" amplifiers won't exist
What does that really mean? "Distinct" is not a verb, do you mean
"distinguish"?
on the playback side you don't want anything having it's own sound because
it isn't an instrument while instruments are supposed to produce sound
speakers and amplifiers have to be neutral - the sound is already on the record
On the recording side, too, but it's rather well understood that most audio
equipment -does- have a "sound" and good engineers understand and exploit
that. Perhaps you realize that €50 speakers seem a bit less accurate that
€500 ones do? (I must assume you have little background in actual audio
engineering or professional recording practice.)
On 10/28/2022 8:51 AM, Reindl Harald wrote:
not in the IT world
Good thing we're not in the IT world, we're in the image- and
aural-processing world.
And none of that is relevant to the original question.
Anyway, go back and look at Clay's question- what does "pad" mean in context
of _filter_chains_?
https://ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg-filters.html#Filtergraph-description
4 Filtergraph description
A filtergraph is a directed graph of connected filters. It can contain
cycles, and there can be multiple links between a pair of filters. Each link
has one input _pad_ on one side connecting it to one filter from which it
takes its input, and one output _pad_ on the other side connecting it to one
filter accepting its output.
[emphasis added]
It seems that 'pad' means a connecting point (consistent with my #3 earlier).
z!
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