Csound also includes denoising software. Snd can probably be used for
the job, particularly with its excellent frequency-domain displays, but
for the fine-detail work you might want to use Ceres. Kjetil's latest
versions include zooming capabilities along with Ceres's other excellent
display and editing options
Best regards,
== Dave Phillips
The Book Of Linux Music & Sound at
On Mon, 2003-02-17 at 10:52, Alexandre Prokoudine wrote:
On 17 Feb 2003 10:22:25 -0600
Rick Taylor <ricktaylor(a)speakeasy.net> wrote:
I do know that if there were ports of d/noise
{thats with a /} or
in-tune {with a - {I think. ...it looks as though they got run out
of business despite the fact that they made one of my favorite
sound sculpting tools. {Symphonic pieces in one pass from common
household white noise... you just can't beat it.}}} that life in
linux would be much, much easier.
What are you wanting to restore?
e.g. vinyl and old tapes recordings
There's a ton of stuff in windows and mac. Cool edit has great noise
stuff for one thing. D/Noise is pretty easy though I've not exactly used
it for its intended purpose...
It's a real boon that audacity has it {noise reduction} on linux...
other than that maybe you could use something like Ceres or an audio
synth package with enough options to be practical for that sort of
thing? Maybe go with some high priced unix/hardware solution?
Personally, I'm thinking snd has major potential for that sort of
thing... It's extensible enough at any rate. :}
--
Rick Taylor <ricktaylor(a)speakeasy.net>
The Dispossessed