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On Wed, Feb 07, 2007 at 05:59:40PM -0800, Tim Howard wrote:
I use SIR
running on ardour-vst on a computer dedicated to reverbs and
other heavy DSP. Connect via netjack, chuck artificial latency on the
sends so it comes back in time, and bob's your uncle.
(may not be as easy as it sounds, contents may settle in transit).
I've tried some other non vst native Linux convolvers, but have not
found one as efficient yet. Recommendations welcomed.
SIR is nice, and has a lovely interface. The only bummer is that it
has a built-in latency of 8960 samples, which (as you mention) must be
compensated for.
I'm anxiously awaiting Aella, by Fons Adriaensen... It sounds like it
will be the best native Linux convolution engine we've seen yet. The
advertisements say that it will be low latency, and that it will
eventually be able to design synthetic reverbs as well. But, from
what I heard, it may be a few more months until we get to see a
working prototype.
Wow, if it's by Fons, it's bound to be good. I suppose I can wait. The maths
involved are probably way over my head, but if there's peon-level work to be done then
I'll find some way to help.
Thanks for all the advice. It sounds like the future of reverb is convolution.
I found something called jack_convolve too. What other linux convolution engines are
there?
I understand that none are (yet) as good as VST, but are any usable now?
- -ken
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