Even "dead" concert halls in the relative sense
have a lot of reverberation. A really dead hall
still has a 1 second reverberation time say
and most of what you hear in the audience is still
reverberant sound.
Robert
On Mon, 20 May 2013, David Pickett wrote:
At 00:50 18-05-13, Robert Greene wro
Hi,
So, there must be quite a lot going on in Focusrite's Liquid Channel.
http://global.focusrite.com/mic-pres-channel-strips/liquid-channel
Reputedly Focusrite license a system from Sintefex.
http://www.sintefex.com/docs/appnotes/dynaconv.PDF
Ciao,
Dave Hunt
Date: Mon, 20 May 2013 20:33:3
On 2013-05-21, Dave Hunt wrote:
So, there must be quite a lot going on in Focusrite's Liquid Channel.
http://global.focusrite.com/mic-pres-channel-strips/liquid-channel
Reputedly Focusrite license a system from Sintefex.
http://www.sintefex.com/docs/appnotes/dynaconv.PDF
There's altogether to
Hello jörn,
Thinking about what you say here, is this working by having pure M from the
front and S from 90 degrees to the side, effectively 'mixing' the M S signals
in the air as they reach the ears/brain? (Maybe I'm thinking about this too
much, my brain is hurting.)
If so, is there signific
At 12:16 21-05-13, Robert Greene wrote:
Even "dead" concert halls in the relative sense
have a lot of reverberation. A really dead hall
still has a 1 second reverberation time say
and most of what you hear in the audience is still
reverberant sound.
Did you ever hear an orchestra playing in th
Does anybody happen to have the Dolby A and SR papers handy? They seem
to be particularly difficult to find without access to the AES archives.
--
Sampo Syreeni, aka decoy - de...@iki.fi, http://decoy.iki.fi/front
+358-50-5756111, 025E D175 ABE5 027C 9494 EEB0 E090 8BA9 0509 85C2
They should be in your in-box by now. I trust you were able to find the
patents?
- Original Message
From: Sampo Syreeni
To: sursound-list
Sent: Tue, May 21, 2013 5:27:36 PM
Subject: [Sursound] [ot] hard to find papers
Does anybody happen to have the Dolby A and SR papers handy? They