>>> Sampo Syreeni <decoy at iki.fi> schrieb am 06.04.2022 um
01:51 in Nachricht
<alpine.DEB.2.21.2204060244280.47345 at
lakka.kapsi.fi>:> On 2022-03-24, Andrew Sonzogni wrote:
>
>> Then it?s not possible to mix those packets before decoding them ?
>
> *Theoretically* you can mix without decoding to *some* degree. But the
> algorithm to do so would be...truly nasty. So just don't go there. You
> need to decode, mix, and recode.
>
> BTW, in many cases, you'd want to hold the separate incoming streams as
> separate already, and just pass them on. E.g. in conferencing
> applications, you'd typically not want to mix everything together,
> because 1) the mixer would prove a single point of failure, 2) business
> oriented conferencing is often an application where what people say is
> legally encumbered or might prove so later on, including the mixer, and
> 3) you typically don't want more than one person to take the stage
> anyhow, because absent body language and other close interaction, it'd
> just be an auditory mess.
Incidentially I came across a Dolby Atmos demo that had about 118 channels
wirh 24bit audio at 48kHz, all in one huge WAV file yesterday.
When I tried to play that (in plain stereo) with audiacity, even my fast
computer (i7 at 4GHz) had dropouts.
So I can imagine that decoding a large number of channels and mixing those
seems to be a bad idea.
Regards,
Ulrich
> --
> Sampo Syreeni, aka decoy - decoy at iki.fi, http://decoy.iki.fi/front
> +358-40-3751464, 025E D175 ABE5 027C 9494 EEB0 E090 8BA9 0509 85C2