Hans Fugal wrote:
This is a little toy I hacked up while learning the Jack API today. It
is not sophisticated, it is hackish, and it is probably not really doing
precisely what I intended it to do. But it's fun. It does a simple form
of granular synthesis: it plays a grain for every incoming
http://www.lionstracs.com/
--
Matt Gerassimoff
On Thursday 13 November 2003 16:48, J_Zar wrote:
I' ve done some tests on a bunch of songs in different compressed
formats
( samplerate = 44100 ): Mp3 and Ogg. For the Mp3 format I tested various
bitrates and I find out that on the playback phase this format has a value
of
On Fri, Nov 14, 2003 at 07:58:29AM -0600, Matt Gerassimoff wrote:
http://www.lionstracs.com/
--
Matt Gerassimoff
i like seq24 very nice thing
--
torben Hohn
http://galan.sourceforge.net -- The graphical Audio language
On Fri, Nov 14, 2003 at 09:20:47AM -0500, Fred Gleason wrote:
On Thursday 13 November 2003 16:48, J_Zar wrote:
I' ve done some tests on a bunch of songs in different compressed
formats
- snip -
different values for Ogg and Mp3? Ogg will be affected by bitrate?
An MPEG
I read:
soon we will see network operators starring at contemporary music festivals.
actually sonification of traffic is already passe, you probably should have
attended some of the festivals ;)
regards,
x
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED] Postmodernism is german romanticism with better
On Fri, 14 Nov 2003 16:08:32 +0100 (CET)
CK [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I read:
soon we will see network operators starring at contemporary music
festivals.
actually sonification of traffic is already passe, you probably should
have attended some of the festivals ;)
Well, it's not all
On Fri, Nov 14, 2003 at 07:58:29AM -0600, Matt Gerassimoff wrote:
http://www.lionstracs.com/
you're late to the party ;-)
we started discussing this on the 10th.
--
Paul Winkler
http://www.slinkp.com
Look! Up in the sky! It's FAKER DART!
(random hero from isometric.spaceninja.com)
I read:
Well, it's not all passee.. Here in my university we have a guy that
sonificates Highway traffic
and stupid me thought that highway traffic sonificates itself pretty well
already.
regards,
x
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED] Postmodernism is german romanticism with better
http://pilot.fm/
* Joern Nettingsmeier [Fri, 14 Nov 2003 at 11:36 +0100]
:-D
to further boost the uselessness of this wonderful thing, how about
mapping different grains to protocol, port numbers and direction?
If boredom allows, I will probably do the following:
Make it extensible via a config file, so
Greetings:
Yes, it's true, I've finally updated the sites with a new edition for
your weekend browsing pleasure. If you don't already know the drill, you
can follow these links to the goods:
http://linux-sound.org(USA)
http://www.linuxsound.at(Europe)
http://linuxsound.jp
Hi Everybody,
This mail is a direct consequence of the song Austin Acton posted recently. :)
A nice little tune made with linux, about linux, that has been quite
successful with very little advertisement.
After a few brain rotations (before you ask, yes, I think by rotating my
brain) I came
This is a little toy I hacked up while learning the Jack API today. It
is not sophisticated, it is hackish, and it is probably not really doing
precisely what I intended it to do. But it's fun. It does a simple form
of granular synthesis: it plays a grain for every incoming packet in
On 14 Nov 2003, Jussi Laako wrote:
I've written preliminary OSS driver for JACK. Patch for jack 0.80
[...]
If you are compiling with OSS Lite, please comment out the non-S16
formats.
Workaround for this:
--cut--
#ifndef AFMT_S32_LE
#define AFMT_S32_LE 0x1000
#endif
#ifndef
Of course I forgot something out of the patch. Here's additional patch
for drivers/oss/Makefile.am...
--
Jussi Laako [EMAIL PROTECTED]
--- jack-audio-connection-kit-0.80.0/drivers/oss/Makefile.am 1970-01-01 02:00:00.0 +0200
+++ jackit/drivers/oss/Makefile.am 2003-11-14
On Wednesday 12 November 2003 18.10, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Speaking of which; I'd be really rather interested in a UI like
that, but as an extra interface for a normal computer based
studio. Sort of like a DAW terminal with a display and a custom
control panel that I can put right above
Jussi Laako [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I've written preliminary OSS driver for JACK. Patch for jack 0.80
attached.
With current CVS you can just run `jackd -d portaudio'.
--
Jack O'Quin
Austin, Texas
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
attached is what i have done today works, but needs to
be checked by someone who can judge about the sideeffects.
Cool. Thanks, Torben. Doing it with so little code is encouraging,
and speaks well for the modularity of the 2.6 kernel. I looked at
your code, but
Jussi Laako [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Of course I forgot something out of the patch. Here's additional patch
for drivers/oss/Makefile.am...
I am *very* sorry that you went to all this work.
Not only is its function mostly duplicated in the PortAudio driver,
but the entire JACK driver
But, I would much prefer to do that than to take on the extra
maintenance load for yet another driver (we already have three).
i welcome as many drivers as people can provide, on the understanding
that they will not necessarily be maintained by anyone except the
contributor, and if the internal
Paul Davis [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
But, I would much prefer to do that than to take on the extra
maintenance load for yet another driver (we already have three).
i welcome as many drivers as people can provide, on the understanding
that they will not necessarily be maintained by anyone
contributor, and if the internal API changes (as has happened between
0.80 and 0.90) and the driver is not ported, it will be removed from
the Makefiles.
That may be clear to the driver writers, but it won't make any sense
to users filing bug reports in Mantis because one of our supported
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