Operating Systems > Linux and UNIX
SRS-WOW effects for Linux?
avello500:
just use the eq setting at 1oookhz for the 1,200 khz range. im not very familliar with the app your using, i gave settings that can be manipulated with most any common eq. of course that is what sounds best on my setup, you need to find what works best for your setup so fiddle around abit. the setting i gave should give you a good starting point.
i have found a number of audio programs at linux.org
they should be able to do what you need.
my expertise is more with audio then linux.
hope it helps
jtpenrod:
quote:Isin't 12,000Khz very high? I mean, the XMMS eq has 1KHZ,3KHZ,6KHZ,12KHZ,14KHZ and 16KZ. How is it possible to reach the 12,000Khz and 1,200Khz mark?
--- End quote ---
He meant 12000Hz and 1200Hz. After all, 12000KHz is 12MHz, and that is way up into the 20m ham band. 1200KHz would also be more than half way into the AM BCB band. In any case, well beyond what you can hear.
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Agent007:
Thanks for the help guys!!
007
choasforages:
my only hearing problem probably has to do with concentration. like if im listening to music, or trying to figure out what my mom heard/*i don't turn the tv on much, she thinks the phone is ringing and stuff*/ i can pick up on things most people cannot, but if im minding my business, i don't hear much. and i envy people that can't hear high frequencys, cuase my parents can't hear electronics, but i can tell if a goddamn crt is on or not/*and its obvoisely not in the same room, but it only works if i don't have my stereo cranked :D , even if its muted. i can also hear when a crt makes that noise, the really high one. i was in the computer lab and me and one other kids asked at the same time, "which one is making that noise" and i proceeded to start turning moniters off in a row to figure it out. and the rest of the classmates though i was insane when i said something about the high pitch whine these things make.
DC:
quote:Originally posted by TheQuirk:
Some Slashdot folk said that if you encode it at a higher bit-rate, it sounds about the same. I don't know if this is true, though.
--- End quote ---
Of course it does. A 64kb/s MP3 also sounds about the same as a 128kb/s MP3, which sounds about the same as a 192kb/s MP3.
Sure, loss is minimized by increasing bitrate, but there is loss. Just rerip the stuff from CD. If you don't have the CD, either buy it, or, if a CD isn't available, convert it to Ogg (if a CD isn't available, it's probably a live bootleg or other low-quality file which doesn't matter if you rerip it - it stays crap). If you d/l-ed it from the net, a CD is probably available. Go to a record store.
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