Hi
I'm about to release a CD (made with linux) which is very
do-it-yourself'ish. When I'm delivering my audio to the CD-pressing
company, I was told that I should "put my isrc code into the audio".
Well I didn't receive this code yet, but I was told that this is
normally done by the company that does the master, but in this case
that's me...
Since it'll cost me something that translates to about $150 to have the
CD-pressing company "put it into the audio", I'd obviously like to do it
myself. However I have no clue what-so-ever what this code is or does.
Anyone knows if it's possible to do this with some linux tool?
--
peace, love & harmony
Atte
http://atte.dk | http://myspace.com/attejensenhttp://anagrammer.dk | http://modlys.dk
Hi there Linux dudes....I hope you can help a super
green newbie...
I have been recording my entire life in the analog
domain and now I have decided to "Go Linux"...
I am clueless but determined and so far have been
advised that Jacklab as opposed to Ubuntu Studio due
to the low latency factor is the way to go
I have avoided digital for this reason....I have tried
to record in another studio when there was latency and
it drove me nuts....
what do you guys suggest...I would be super
appreciative of any input...
I will be running a little Sony Vaio a few yeard
old...
I have to say this is an amzing place and you guys
should all be proud of your success at spreading Linux
I will do my bit here in Nashville USA..I am here from
NYC via Scotland....
peace,love and trust the Universe
gene
____________________________________________________________________________________
Never miss a thing. Make Yahoo your home page.
http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs
Version 1.2 of Sonic Visualiser, an application for viewing and
analysing the contents of music audio files, is now available.
http://www.sonicvisualiser.org/
This is a significant feature release, containing a number of new
features over the previous release including a handy audio alignment
capability. For more details, please read the release notes at
https://sourceforge.net/project/shownotes.php?release_id=578145
Sonic Visualiser contains advanced waveform and spectrogram viewers,
as well as editors for many sorts of audio annotations. Besides
visualisation, it can make and play selections based on the locations
of automatically detected features, seamlessly loop playback of single
or multiple noncontiguous regions, synthesise annotations for
playback, and slow down playback while retaining display
synchronisation.
Sonic Visualiser supports the Vamp plugin API for plugins that extract
descriptive or analytical data from audio. Vamp plugins for onset,
pitch and note detection and tempo tracking using the Aubio library
are available, as well as further plugins for tempo tracking,
chromagram analysis, constant-Q spectrogram, spectral centroid, power
curve, key estimation, tonal change detection, harmonic spectrogram,
structural segmentation, timbral similarity, audio alignment
calculation and a large number of low-level spectral features. There
is also a comprehensive SDK for use by developers of Vamp plugins and
hosts. For more information about Vamp plugins, please see:
http://www.vamp-plugins.org/
Sonic Visualiser is Free Software distributed under the GNU General
Public License. The 1.2 release is available now in source code form
or as binaries for Linux, OS/X, and Windows.
Chris
On 20 February 2008 at 14:27, "Christopher Stamper" <christopherstamper(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> What works? Nothing. Dialup is the curse of mankind.
Now it is. But, it used to be wonderful.
> But some of us just have no choice. :-(
Understood. I have DSL, but I want FiOS and it's not available. I
get rusty twisted pair instead.
> Actually, regular file links with full read permissions work fine for
> resuming. Try Download Accelerator Plus or something, it helps.
Once you go through the SourceForge system and get to a mirror, then
you can copy an actual file URL. I've used both FileRunner and wget
with their 'resume' features for downloading partially grabbed files.
Maybe that would work for you?
G'luck....
--
Kevin
Hiho,
this is somewhat offtopic,
but I need to find someone with a working Thinkpad R51 who is willing
to screw it open and tell me the number that is on a certain chip.
My R51 died a while ago, due to seemingly just this one chip having
burnt out, so I would like to try and replace it.
>From its size, I think I can solder it by hand.
Please contact me offlist if you happen to have an R51, so that I can
send you a picture to indicate which chip I need the number of.
sincerely,
Marije
First of all, let me say I am way over my head in bringing this up; I
might be totally dreaming.
I have a Muse Receptor (museresearch.com if you're not familiar) I
used with my band for a couple years. Now that the band broke up, I
have decided to keep it around for studio use. Muse created a
communication protocol called "Uniwire" for sending audio and other
various information to and from the box. Problem is, Muse (from what
i can tell) only makes their plugin in VST form, and the communication
protocol is private (someone correct me if i'm wrong). I can
communicate with the box using the VST build of Ardour, but it's buggy
(the main problems being that the plugin doesn't re-load correctly
when opening a session, and a second instance of the plugin won't
communicate with the box, which kind of defeats the purpose). What
would be perfect would be a little JACK client that presents the
Receptor as 16 ins and 16 outs, that can be arbitrarily patched into
the audio stream.
I have done some preliminary packet sniffing and it looks like a
pretty simple protocol, basically a couple SOAP requests on port 51000
to establish a list of available patches, and then a flood of audio
data on UDP port 50000 (with replies containing the processed audio
data). The problem is figuring out how they communicate things like
sample rate, assigning audio to different channels, etc. It would
take a lot of sniffing to nail all that down.
So I guess I'm throwing this out there to see if anyone's looked into
this before. Chances are slim, but hey why not. Maybe I'm lucky and
one of the Muse guys is on this list? If so, hey Muse guys! I rather
like the box and I'd love to make it more useful.
Sean
--
the love of cruise control is the root of all kinds of road rage.
Hi,
What's a good guitar tuner on linux (debian)?
dirk
_________________________________________________________________
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While Jackd is runnning, other applications like Amarok and system sound
alerts cannot use Alsa at the same time.
But JACK diagram given in it's web site shows that any non-jackified
application can use Alsa Userspace Library at the same time.
And, Sampo Savolainan told me that, other programs can use the ALSA library,
but jack needs exclusive
access to the audio hardware it uses. Nothing is stopping a non-jack program
to access other sound interfaces you might have in your system.
How is this exclusive access given to Jack ?
--
Arda EDEN
Cumhuriyet University
Faculty of Fine Arts
Department of Music Technology