*****************************************************************************
1.
Snd-ls v0.9.4.3
---------------
Released 30.6.2005
About
-----
Snd-ls is a distribution of the sound editor Snd. Its target is
people that don't know scheme very well, and don't want
to spend too much time configuring Snd. It can also serve
as a quick introduction to Snd and how it can be set up.
Changes from 0.9.3.0 to 0.9.4.3
--------------------------------
-Upgraded various rt-stuff.
-Upgraded various rt-stuff++
-Removed jack_set_server_dir guile-binding from rt-engine.scm, because its
removed from the newer versions of jack.
-Updated SND to v7.14 from 19.6.2005. Many important changes.
http://www.notam02.no/arkiv/src/snd/
*****************************************************************************
2.
Mammut V0.20
------------
Mammut will FFT your sound in one single gigantic analysis (no windows).
These spectral data, where the development in time is incorporated in
mysterious ways, may then be transformed by different algorithms prior to
resynthesis. An interesting aspect of Mammut is its completely
non-intuitive sound transformation approach.
Changes 0.18 -> 0.20
--------------------
-Fixed a bug in the Makefile caused by a fix in the previous release.
-Fixed some bugs in the Makefile.
http://www.notam02.no/arkiv/src/
*****************************************************************************
3.
Ceres V0.43
-----------
Ceres is an advanced program for displaying sonograms and for sound
effects in the frequency domain. And more.
Changes 0.42 -> 0.43
--------------------
-Fixed some bugs in the Makefile
http://www.notam02.no/arkiv/src/
*****************************************************************************
4.
Snd RT-extension documentation
-------------------------------
The realtime extension for SND makes it possible to do signal processing
in realtime using guile and a special scheme-like compiled language.
It has many features, as jack-support, CLM, a realtime scheduler,
a compiler, busses, dynamic patching, shared variables, ladspa and more.
It can also be made to work with Common Music.
http://www.notam02.no/arkiv/doc/snd-rt/
--
Hi,
I am thinking about adding midi or/and osc support to Jackbeat
(http://xung.org/jackbeat). My idea is to use a hardware midi controller such as
the evolution uc33 to control pitch, volume and muting on every tracks. This
would help using Jackbeat for live performances.
I have never coded with midi, neither with osc. What's the fastest and smartest
way to achieve this idea ?
Regards
--
og
Dear friends,
thanks again for your help with my ports definition yesterday - with
it, I created a clipping booster plugin with three control ports and
it works perfectly.
However, today I added the fourth port, following all rules I learnt,
but I get the same segfaults as yesterday. If you could have a look
at the sources (attached), it would be of fantastic help for me.
Once again, please forgive me, I am a real newbie at this and things
that are very obvious for you are not such for me... But as I
understand all these bells and whistles, I will be more silent ;-)
Thanks a lot again.
Regards,
Artemiy.
Hello all!
I have a problem with creating a plugin with more than one control
port. In the attachment you'll find "booster-simple.c" which has one
"Gain" port and my attempt to add a second port in "booster.c". For
some reason the latter cannot be used - the sources seem to be
correct, it compiles fine, but then if I test with "applyplugin" it
segfaults and other hosts complain about a malloc() error and hang.
Debugging shows that ports are not properly connected:
[connectPortToBooster] setting BOOSTER_INPUT1
[connectPortToBooster] setting BOOSTER_OUTPUT1
[runMonoBooster]
applyplugin: booster.c:112: runMonoBooster: Assertion
`psBooster->m_pfGainValue != 0' failed.
...but I cannot investigate further as my C is very basic.
I would really appreciate any help. I based my plugin on the amp.c
from the SDK, and I see that in example plugins like simple delay
(where there is more than one control port) memory allocation is done
differently, but I just don't know how to properly apply these
techniques to my plugin...
Thanks very much!
Artemiy.
P.S. I've sent a message with a 50Kb attachment and it's in moderation
queue, but these sources are newer.
Greetings,
you may have seen the recent mail on this list looking for an author
doing a LADSPA article in a german Linux magazine; I've decided to
step in.
Now, while I do have some knowledge of the technical nature of LADSPA
I can't truthfully say I know all the plugins and hosts out there as
well as they deserve.
So, I'd love to hear from you: what do you write or use (hosts and
plugins, realtime or offline, a shameless plug for your efforts is
welcome too!), any issues you take with it, LADSPA vs. VST, the DSSI
expansion etc etc; in short, anything you find worth noting is
appreciated.
Thanks, Tim
Hi,
Let me inform you about the online demonstration against the
patentability of software (=software patens) which the Commission of
the European Union wants to introduce. As far as I understand the
process of passing the appropriate bill in the institutions of the EU,
the patentability of software could be possible from July 2005 on.
There is a site, run by among others Attac Germany, where you can
protest against this, by uploading a picture of yourself:
http://demo.stoppt-softwarepatente.de/index.php?content=demo&lang=GB
"So far 3883 people have demonstrated here. The more people
participate, the clearer a joint picture of the protest will be shown.
Short before the decision in the European Parliament we will print this
picture on a huge banner and show it in front of the European
Parliament in Strasbourg. This way you can also be a part of the
international demonstration."
Regards,
Jens
___________________________________________________________
Gesendet von Yahoo! Mail - Jetzt mit 1GB Speicher kostenlos - Hier anmelden: http://mail.yahoo.de
Albert Graef writes:
> that's great news.
Certainly is!
> Has Rosegarden been updated to a newer Lily yet? Last
> time I looked, they were still generating 2.0 code. :(
Rosegarden's been able to generate 2.2 code for ages, and 2.4 for a while - though I can't quite remember whether that was in the 1.0 release or not.
We're partly but not completely up to date with 2.6. I might well look at that this week, unless anyone else offers. Our Lilypond output is not terribly well structured for any version, so a bit of an overhaul might be nice too.
Chris
LilyPond is a free/open source package to create beautiful music
notation. With version 2.6, LilyPond is now truly for everyone.
- For every platform
LilyPond now installs in a snap on Windows, MacOS X, and any version
of Linux/x86. Get up and running in minutes!
- For every language
Pango text formatting lets you print Unicode lyrics in your favorite
script and font.
- For every application
Create SVG files, and edit them in Inkscape.
In addition, version 2.6 adds support for
- staves starting anywhere on the page
- solfa notation
- arrowed lines
- better auto-beaming
- circled text
- string-number notation
- better ledger line formatting
- score separators
- cleaner syntax for text markup
- pagebreaks around titles
- stemlets on beams
- easier titles customization
- direct PostScript or SVG output
- (te)TeX no longer necessary
- revised manual
- website now translated into Dutch and French
Grab it at
http://lilypond.org
A big thank-you goes out to our contributors, translators, website
translators and bug-hunters:
CONTRIBUTORS
Andreas Scherer, Arno Waschk, Bertalan Fodor, Carl Sorensen, Christian
Hitz, David Jedlinsky, Erlend Aasland, Heikki Junes, John Williams,
Jonatan Liljedahl, Jürgen Reuter, Mats Bengtsson, Matthias Neeracher,
Mathieu Giraud, Nicolas Sceaux, Pal Benko, Sebastiano Vigna, Tatsuya
Ono, Vicente Solsona Della, Werner Lemberg, and Yuval Harel.
TRANSLATORS
Abel Cheung, John Mandereau, Olcay Yıldırım, Roland Stigge and Steven
Michael Murphy
WEBSITE TRANSLATORS
Gauvain Pocentek, Jean-Charles Malahieude, John Mandereau, and Tineke
de Munnik.
SPONSORS
Bertalan Fodor, Chris Sawer, Gunther Strube, Hans Forbrich, Jonathan
Walther, Marcus Macauley, and Steve Doonan.
BUG HUNTERS/SUGGESTIONS
Alexandre Beneteau, Andreas Scherer, Anthony W. Youngman, Antti
Kaihola, Arjan Bos, David Bobroff, Bernard Hurley, Bruce Fairchild,
Bruce McIntyre, Bruce Fairchild, Daniel Johnson, David Rogers, Dylan
Nicholson, Ed Jackson, Erik Ronström, Fernando Pablo Lopez-Lezcano,
Gilles Sadowski, Jack O'Quin, Jeff Smith, Johannes Schindelin, John
Mandereau, Jose Miguel Pasini, Josiah Boothby, Jürgen Reuter, Karl
Hammar, Laura Conrad, Olivier Guéry, Paul Scott, Richard Schoeller,
Rob Platt, Roman Stöckl-Schmidt, Russ Jorgensen, Simon Bailey, Stephen
McCarthy, Sven Axelsson, Tapio Tuovila, Tom Cato Amundsen, Will Oram,
and Wolfgang Hoffmann.
Happy music printing,
The LilyPond development team,
Han-Wen Nienhuys & Jan Nieuwenhuizen
Core development
Graham Percival
Documentation Editor
Erik Sandberg
Bug Meister
Pedro Kroeger
Build Meister
--
Jan Nieuwenhuizen <janneke(a)gnu.org> | GNU LilyPond - The music typesetter
http://www.xs4all.nl/~jantien | http://www.lilypond.org
Le Mardi 28 Juin 2005 16:26, Jens M Andreasen a écrit :
> On Tue, 2005-06-28 at 16:14 +0200, julien2 wrote:
> > there is two major french institute :
> > www.grame.fr
> > www.ircam.fr
> > cheers
>
> Thanx!
>
> IRCAM is the intitute that presented phase distortion synthesis wayback
> in a universe unoccuppied by patent lawyers.
>
> There should be a person and/or a group of people having done the
> research and discoveries.
>
> Anybody recall?
have a look at http://articles.ircam.fr, you will find the author
the group in question is the analysis/synthesis team
jul
>
>
> /ja
>
> > Le Mardi 28 Juin 2005 15:18, Jens M Andreasen a écrit :
> > > On Tue, 2005-06-28 at 14:14 +0200, Jens M Andreasen wrote:
> > > > I am currently looking [in wikipedia] at the Casio section near the
> > > > end (regarding phase distortion.) Wasn't this technique developed way
> > > > back in the 60's by french academics?
> > >
> > > Let me refrase that to:
> > >
> > > I am almost certain that this technique was developed at the "french
> > > national institute of electronic music" (or some such?)
> > >
> > > Question:
> > > What is the actual name of that institute, and can anybody cunning in
> > > french help me search in their wayback archives?
> > >
> > > /ja
Hi all,
I've just released my Faust module for the Q programming language. A
realtime synth application based on this module, QFSynth, is also available.
Faust (http://faudiostream.sf.net) is Grame's functional DSP programming
language. Q (http://q-lang.sf.net) is a general-purpose functional
programming language with an extensive collection of multimedia-related
modules. If you're a developer interested in modern FP tools for
multimedia and DSP programming, you should definitely take a look. ;-)
Cheers,
Albert
--
Dr. Albert Gr"af
Dept. of Music-Informatics, University of Mainz, Germany
Email: Dr.Graef(a)t-online.de, ag(a)muwiinfa.geschichte.uni-mainz.de
WWW: http://www.musikwissenschaft.uni-mainz.de/~ag