On 2011-11-26, John Lundsten wrote:
Now for sure I'm not saying .wav is the only format for all time.
Of course not. RIFF, CAF, and whatever, follow the same EAV/TLV formula
that Commodore Amiga's IFF did:
entity-attribute-value/type-length-value. The four byte/32-bit total
schema for each
On 2011-11-25, Richard wrote:
I totally agree, any mention of MP3/WMA or any of the very lossy
formats in the same breath as surround cannot be taken seriously.
That is very much true where it goes to ambisonic and the existing
formats. But as for the formats and say 5.1, not so much. That ac
On 2011-11-25, Marinos Koutsomichalis wrote:
but still I' m not quite sure about the most important issue: which is
the most 'common' file-format for such things ?
In order the two most common ones are (I think):
1) Microsoft's AVI container (RIFF), with video as pure MPEG-2 and audio
as 2
On 2011-11-25, John Lundsten wrote:
And yes for sure the RIFF Wav (with Wav extensible) has the cool chan
mapping features CAF has, and very much as on a Mac, hardly anyone has
bothered to implement it.
Don't even go there. Really. E.g. Martin Leese spent real effort getting
the OggPCM draft
On 2011-11-25, Marinos Koutsomichalis wrote:
I was asked a 4-channel work for an online-release - I' m now trying
to figure out what the best way to "release" it would be..
For me personally, the first question would be "which four channels"?
"What are their semantics, precisely?"
Like, how
I suggest to take a look at the Web Audio API from the W3C :
https://dvcs.w3.org/hg/audio/raw-file/tip/webaudio/specification.html
--
Marc
Le Sat, 26 Nov 2011 01:26:33 +0200
Marinos Koutsomichalis a écrit:
>
> about the 4 channels: they are 4 channels of audio to be played back
> by a quad se
On 2011-11-23, Fons Adriaensen wrote:
I don't think you need to reformulate the theory. Air absorbtion can
be taken into account numerically just in the same way as the
frequency response of the reflecting surfaces.
Seconded. The absorption term also seems to be pretty simple in the
analog/c
'This is stretching the actual facts a bit too much to be
left unchallenged.'
Ok. staying with the 'provocative' though true idea.
I see your 'challenge', but see nothing in your post to contradict my
suggestions. (or assertions if you like).
Now if Mac OS is a belief system for you, IE knowin
about the 4 channels: they are 4 channels of audio to be played back by a quad
set-up.. In fact they are decoded from a b-format recording, but what I want to
release is a quad version of the piece.
as I mentioned I cannot consider wav/aiff and other lossless options because of
their size.
On 25 Nov 2011, at 23:15, Bearcat M. Şandor wrote:
> If i'm messing around (i'm not a serious audio
> professional) in Ardour isn't it a wave file first,
afaic no. normally you select the kind of file you want your audio saved to. I
use aiffs most of the times. And you can convert to lots of ot
On Fri, Nov 25, 2011 at 03:51:03AM -, John Lundsten wrote:
> Well as approx 98% of computers are PC's, whatever the merits
> of CAF (beyond ticking the 'box' this is different to what is
> available on a PC) it would be totally unsuitable to the OP.
>
> And yes for sure the RIFF Wav (with Wa
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Marinos Koutsomichalis wrote:
> but still I' m not quite sure about the most important issue:
> which is the most 'common' file-format for such things ?
In terms of installed base of players, AC3 and DTS are the most common
formats for delivery of surround audio. VLC player can decode either
one
Hi,
Date: Fri, 25 Nov 2011 03:51:03 -
From: "John Lundsten"
IMO if one wants to store so called linear PCM, use WAV. All other
formats offer less & only exist for (a) backward compatibility for
which I have no problem or (b) to screw the customer, which I find
obnoxious.
AIFF, AIFC
Marinos Koutsomichalis wrote:
> quite a few ideas thus far..
>
> but still I' m not quite sure about the most important issue:
> which is the most 'common' file-format for such things ?
Four channel works are not common.
Therefore, there are no common file formats
for on-line delivery.
Regards,
"Michael Chapman"
> At 05:52 25/11/2011, Marinos Koutsomichalis wrote:
>> Hello list,
>>
>> I was asked a 4-channel work for an online-release - I' m now trying to
>> figure out what the best way to "release" it would be..
...
>> are there any other ideas/observations/advices ??
...
> It would h
: 11/24/11
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At 05:52 25/11/2011, Marinos Koutsomichalis wrote:
>I did some web-research and I think that the most common formats for
>that surround sound is mp3/flac and AAC
I dont know why FLAC and MP3 are mentioned in the same
sentence. While FLAC is reckoned to be non-lossy (and certainly
seems to be
12:33 am, Marinos Koutsomichalis wrote:
>
>> I was asked a 4-channel work for an online-release - I' m now trying to
>> figure out what the best way to "release" it would be..
>
> -- next part --
he best way to "release" it would be..
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