On Tue, 21 Jul 2009, Patrick Mueller wrote:
>
> I've just started playing a bit with audio. One thing I noticed with
> both FF 3.5 and WebKit nightlies is that usage of the "loop" attribute
> set to true does not provide seamless looping. ie, there is a
> significant pause between when the au
On Wed, 22 Jul 2009 04:38:08 +0200, Patrick Mueller
wrote:
> But since you mention it, any idea whether the Moz developers plan on
> implementing seamless looping or not? I'm curious whether anyone cares,
> and what folks interpretation of looping means. The spec should be made
> more spe
On Wed, 22 Jul 2009 04:38:08 +0200, Patrick Mueller
wrote:
Robert O'Callahan wrote:
On Wed, Jul 22, 2009 at 1:36 AM, Patrick Mueller
wrote:
I've just started playing a bit with audio. One thing I noticed with
both
FF 3.5 and WebKit nightlies is that usage of the "loop" attribute set
Robert O'Callahan wrote:
On Wed, Jul 22, 2009 at 1:36 AM, Patrick Mueller wrote:
I've just started playing a bit with audio. One thing I noticed with both
FF 3.5 and WebKit nightlies is that usage of the "loop" attribute set to
true does not provide seamless looping. ie, there is a significan
On Wed, Jul 22, 2009 at 1:36 AM, Patrick Mueller wrote:
> I've just started playing a bit with audio. One thing I noticed with both
> FF 3.5 and WebKit nightlies is that usage of the "loop" attribute set to
> true does not provide seamless looping. ie, there is a significant pause
> between when
Ian Hickson wrote:
On Tue, 7 Jul 2009, Philip Jagenstedt wrote:
For all of the simpler use cases you can already generate sounds
yourself with a data uri. For example, with is 2 samples of silence:
"data:audio/wav;base64,UklGRigAAABXQVZFZm10IBABAAEARKwAAIhYAQACABAAZGF0YQQA".
I hop
On Mon, 6 Jul 2009, Charles Pritchard wrote:
>
> Use a sound of varying pitch to hint to a user the location of their
> mouse (is it hovering over a button, is it x/y pixels away from the edge
> of the screen, how close is it to the center).
>
> Alter the pitch of a sound to make a very cheap mi