Sadly, I'm sitting in a church on the other side of town making my own surround
recording of works by Nick and Tony Bicât, so will miss it. Impressed with what
I've heard so far, though. If anyone makes a recording, I'd love a copy.
Hope it all goes well and thanks for putting the test together.
Today is the last opportunity to hear the BBC live experimental 4.0
internet transmissions of this year's Proms from the Royal Albert
Hall. The Last Night is made for sursound and should be worth
hearing with the BBC's mic setup. The concert starts at 7:30 pm BST,
which is 2:30 pm EDT. The t
Rupert Brun wrote:
the browser/flash requirement/restriction is your arbitary choice.
I doubt I am that exceptional as a Linux user in not using
browser/flash to access BBC content.
I could even download r3_aaclca.pls with wget look in it and
download with wget using the long http:// url.
> the browser/flash requirement/restriction is your arbitary choice.
> I doubt I am that exceptional as a Linux user in not using browser/flash to
> access BBC content.
> I could even download r3_aaclca.pls with wget look in it and download with
> wget using the long http:// url.
I think we ar
Rupert Brun wrote:
Some people have commented that we should make a "normal" surround
sound stream available but I'm not at all sure what they mean by
this. For live streaming you need a codec and a transport layer. Our
"normal" transport layers Flash and Shoutcast. Flash won't support
more than
Thanks everyone for the feedback and if you get the experiment to work for you
please feel free to comment via the blog.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/radio3/posts/BBC-Proms-in-Surround-Sound
To provide a bit more detail to the biggest concern within this group, which
seems to be around universalit
Icant test 64tk soundflower but I use 16 tk version ie 1.5.2 ish - because
Protools wont use the 64tk
You could try going back uninstall and install older version but I dont get
firefox working with
test file
Its fine on chrome in 10.8 and 10.6
mick
On 20 Jul 2014, at 19:12, Ralf R Radermach
Am 19.07.14 18:47, schrieb m...@superorg.com:
Easy to record stream on a Mac
Install Cycling74's Soundflower its free and doesnt interfere with anything
I've spent the afternoon trying various things and Chrome doesn't output
any sound through the 64-channel version. 2-channels works. With
F
David Pickett wrote:
...
> Regarding the lack of browser choice, I agree that it would be nice
> if all adhered to the HTML5 standard; but they dont. (What's the
> point of useful standards -- i.e. the HTML5 media tag -- if not
> everbody uses them?)
I am sure it doesn't help that there is no act
On Sat, Jul 19, 2014 at 9:47 AM, wrote:
On 19 Jul 2014, at 10:13, Ralf R Radermacher wrote:
Am 18.07.14 15:21, schrieb Rupert Brun:
> The BBC will make the BBC Proms Concerts available in 4.0 using
MPEG-DASH. The stream will be available internationally.
Does anyone have the first idea how to r
I AM capturing it in the digital domain. It's 48kHz.
David
At 14:59 19-07-14, Ralf R Radermacher wrote:
Am 19.07.14 14:53, schrieb David Pickett:
It has to be do-able, but how you actually manage it depends on your
A/D/A converter, which must obviously be at least 4-track.
I'm aware of the
Am 19.07.14 18:47, schrieb m...@superorg.com:
Set your Macs Sound Output to Soundflower16 - at this point you wont hear
anything from chrome
This is as far as I get. Soundflower64, actually (only 2 or 64 channels
here).
at this point launch soundflowerbed and allocate tracks to play out o
Hi Fons.
I disabled PA and Jackd, enabled all output channels in alsamixer,
and opened Chromium 34 on the test page:
http://rdmedia.bbc.co.uk/proms/test.html
Chromium can use Alsa, but I also have a mapping problem.
Here's what's coming out of my 7.1 sound card (per jack):
Lime green (front):
l
Easy to record stream on a Mac
Install Cycling74's Soundflower its free and doesnt interfere with anything
Install Audacity its a free recorder
Set your Macs Sound Output to Soundflower16 - at this point you wont hear
anything from chrome
at this point launch soundflowerbed and allocate tracks
On Sat, Jul 19, 2014 at 10:00:20AM -0400, Marc Lavallée wrote:
> Here's how to do it on Linux. To get the sound of web browsers
> (including Chrome/Chromium), I use the Pulseaudio sound server,
> installed by default. I also use the jackd sound server with the
> pulseaudio module for jackd. There
Sat, 19 Jul 2014 11:13:11 +0200, Ralf R Radermacher wrote :
> Am 18.07.14 15:21, schrieb Rupert Brun:
> > The BBC will make the BBC Proms Concerts available in 4.0 using
> > MPEG-DASH. The stream will be available internationally.
>
> Does anyone have the first idea how to record this stuff on a M
--On 19 July 2014 14:59 +0200 Ralf R Radermacher
wrote:
> I'm aware of the various possibilities to do this via an audio
> interface. I'd rather capture the signal in the digital domain.
Many of these interfaces can, through their control programs, do
exactly that.
Paul
--
Paul Hodges
__
Am 19.07.14 14:53, schrieb David Pickett:
It has to be do-able, but how you actually manage it depends on your
A/D/A converter, which must obviously be at least 4-track.
I'm aware of the various possibilities to do this via an audio
interface. I'd rather capture the signal in the digital doma
>On 19 Jul 2014, at 10:13, Ralf R Radermacher wrote:
>
>> Does anyone have the first idea how to record this stuff on a Mac?
At 12:35 19-07-14, John Leonard wrote:
>Well, it depends on how you're listening: because I'm using a Metric
>Halo ULN-8, I just route the decoded signal through their con
Well, it depends on how you're listening: because I'm using a Metric Halo
ULN-8, I just route the decoded signal through their console application which
lets me record all four channels. I would imagine that most sound cards will
let you do the same thing, if that's how you're getting the signal
Am 18.07.14 15:21, schrieb Rupert Brun:
The BBC will make the BBC Proms Concerts available in 4.0 using MPEG-DASH. The
stream will be available internationally.
Does anyone have the first idea how to record this stuff on a Mac?
Ralf
--
Ralf R. Radermacher - Köln/Cologne, Germany
Blog : ht
David Pickett wrote:
At 21:38 18-07-14, John Leonard wrote:
>Stream working well here - shame it's wildly out of sync with the
>broadcast picture, though.
>
>Some distortion apparent on FF passages?
>
Yes, I heard some distortion on the violins in places: it sounds digital
but I wasnt sure
At 21:38 18-07-14, John Leonard wrote:
>Stream working well here - shame it's wildly out of sync with the
>broadcast picture, though.
>
>Some distortion apparent on FF passages?
>
Yes, I heard some distortion on the violins in places: it sounds
digital but I wasnt sure where it came from, as I'v
Rev Tony Newnham wrote:
Hi
It looks interesting - but access via the digital networks would be
easier. At least it should be simpler than the BBC's Quadraphonic
trials back in the 1970's - that required to 2 FM receivers! Not
sure that my internet is currently reliable enough - especially in
t
Stream working well here - shame it's wildly out of sync with the broadcast
picture, though.
Some distortion apparent on FF passages?
John
On 18 Jul 2014, at 14:21, Rupert Brun wrote:
> The BBC will make the BBC Proms Concerts available in 4.0 using MPEG-DASH.
> The stream will be available
Rupert Brun wrote:
We can't deliver over normal broadcast channels because we don't have
the bandwidth and there would be very significant costs for a small
audience.
We are using MPEG DASH because it handles surround sound well and can
be decoded entirely within the browser without any third pa
Jörn Nettingsmeier wrote:
On 07/18/2014 03:48 PM, Andy Furniss wrote:
Rupert Brun wrote:
The BBC will make the BBC Proms Concerts available in 4.0 using
MPEG-DASH. The stream will be available internationally.
So the're available to the world subject to what browser/os you
use, but not to me
At 15:34 18-07-14, Richard wrote:
>Firstly, i must say a thank you for letting us know. But, after the
>last test it is obvious that a large majority of us were unable to
>enjoy these broadcasts due to the limited requirements.
I should be interested to know what you mean by "limited
requiremen
nswers can reach a wider audience as I
don't want to have to answer the same questions twice if possible.
Many thanks,
Rupert
--
Message: 2
Date: Fri, 18 Jul 2014 14:34:58 +0100
From: "Richard"
To: "Surround Sound discussion group"
Subje
On 07/18/2014 03:48 PM, Andy Furniss wrote:
Rupert Brun wrote:
The BBC will make the BBC Proms Concerts available in 4.0 using
MPEG-DASH. The stream will be available internationally.
So the're available to the world subject to what browser/os you use, but
not to me who pays the licence fee.
Rupert Brun wrote:
The BBC will make the BBC Proms Concerts available in 4.0 using
MPEG-DASH. The stream will be available internationally.
So the're available to the world subject to what browser/os you use, but
not to me who pays the licence fee.
Why must MPEG-DASH be used for this?
It's no
Firstly, i must say a thank you for letting us know. But, after the last test
it is obvious that a large majority of us were unable to enjoy these broadcasts
due to the limited requirements.
May i ask a question as a BBC licence payer. Why is this not available via the
standard broadcast method
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