search for: noisier

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 21 matches for "noisier".

2009 Jan 15
1
noise in time series
Hi! I have two time series. Both measure the same thing and I would like to determine which one is noisier. Would it be a good measure of the noise in each time series the absolute lag difference? Is this a good measure? Any other measure I could use? Thanks for help :) David Riano Center for Spatial Technologies and Remote Sensing (CSTARS) University of California 250-N, The Barn One Shields Avenue...
2005 Aug 29
1
RE: Noise on ZAP channel
I have a couple SIP phones on a PIII 1Ghz 256MB * server with a TDM01B connected to the PSTN. Calls between SIP phones are clear. Calls to the PSTN are quite noisy. The other person does not hear noise but I hear quite a bit. It is not an annoying sound but definitely much noisier than typical PSTN or even cell phone calls. I believe I have a TDM400P REV H card. I definitely don't have any IRQ issues. Everything not required is disabled in BIOS. Zaptel drivers have been compiled with defaults and with MMX and other enhancements. Have tried V1.0.9.1 and current 1....
2006 Jan 04
0
Writting a line in encoder with speex compression.
...g was a succeed. Then, I tried introducing the compression into the audio program following the indications given in Speex Codec Manual (both into de API section and mostly in the sampleenc code: - The resulting program works, but the quality is much poorer than using speexenc over a raw file (much noisier). - The ALSA PCM api, uses a capture buffer of 340bytes, but speex encoder expects a 160bytes buffer, I think here could be the problem, as I am trying to force speex_encoder to use a 340bytes buffer. Any help would be grateful. Juan Zapatero. ______________________ Este mensaje, y en su caso, c...
2007 Dec 24
0
happy holidays
...OS and for everyone involved with it including the developers, supporters, contributors, editors, bug reporters, everyone. You all know who you are. And I want to take this opportunity to thank all of you for the time and efforts that you have put into the project. 2008 will be bigger, better, noisier and even more fun! Enjoy. -- Karanbir Singh : http://www.karan.org/ : 2522219 at icq
2009 Jan 16
2
Recommendations for consumer-grafe GPSes?
2. Recommendations? My use case is pretty typical. I have one Linux machine I want to protect, automated shutown is desirable, blackouts longer than a hour are very rare at my location (the last one I can remember was in 1993), brownouts are very rare and mild, but summer thunderstorms are common and can be severe. I'm a good match for your typical consmer-grade UPS. 2a. In 2009, what do
2011 Mar 09
4
Couple wine development questions
I'm not a developer but there are a few aspects of wine that I'm interested in. I've searched around, but can't really find answers to my questions. First of all, it appears that wine-dev's only use mailing lists as their primary means of communications. This forum is labeled "Wine Users", so probably the wrong place to ask, but there's no "Wine
2018 Mar 02
0
RADIUS
...g to do, isn?t it? Some documentation of HPs > MSRs > stated that the controller can distribute the wireless devices between > access > points to even out the bandwidth, and if it can do that, it could as well > distribute them for triangulation. > It isn't. Wireless is much noisier and uses longer wavelengths than light. It is like walking through a hall of mirrors with sunglasses on. You are only able to see certain things, lots of things reflect, everything within sensor range which is broadcasting is showing up even if it is a different SSID, and a ton of other items. This...
2006 May 21
3
Re: High pitched whine with Speex
Changing from using floats to shorts did fix the high pitched tone problem. I'm having other problems but I'll look into it more first. SteveK wrote: > > On May 21, 2006, at 6:33 PM, Kevin Jenkins wrote: > >> When I just copy the microphone input buffer to the output buffer the >> sound plays OK. But if I encode and decode the buffer through Speex I >>
2001 Nov 15
1
X11 cookies and forwarding (fwd)
On Thu, 15 Nov 2001, Dan Astoorian wrote: > Date: Thu, 15 Nov 2001 16:09:20 -0500 > From: Dan Astoorian <djast at cs.toronto.edu> > To: Ed Phillips <ed at UDel.Edu> > Subject: Re: X11 cookies and forwarding > > On Thu, 15 Nov 2001 15:46:22 EST, Ed Phillips writes: > > I'm guess I wasn't following the whole cookies discussion completely > >
2007 Jan 03
6
Any quiet 24 port POE switches out there?
I have an upcoming install which places the switch close to some employees in a quiet work environment. Can anyone recommend a quiet 24 port POE switch? The Linksys SRW224P behind me right now would be objectionable, I'm sure. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL:
2016 May 18
2
[RFC] Helping release management
...take it even less serious than they do now. :( > Yes, those are required answers, but I disagree that marking the bug is useless. I just meant "creating an empty bug, without any info or metadata" is useless. Or, as useful as saying "fixes bug" on the commit message, but noisier. > Well, if I need to change my workflow (e.g., using a different tool than git for the commit) for llvm compared to the other project I work on, that path is already dead for me. If we do not achieve transparency, we shouldn’t work into it. Well, it's hard to get everyone working in the...
2018 Mar 02
4
RADIUS
Stephen John Smoogen wrote: > On 1 March 2018 at 12:26, hw <hw at gc-24.de> wrote: >> Stephen John Smoogen wrote: >>> >>> On 1 March 2018 at 08:42, hw <hw at gc-24.de> wrote: >>> >>>> >>>> I didn?t say I want that, and I don?t know yet what I want. A captive >>>> portal may >>>> be nice, but I haven?t
2006 Jan 21
3
Hz vs bitrate?
the Vorbis FAQ says: "mid to high quality (8kHz-48.0kHz, 16+ bit, polyphonic) audio and music at fixed and variable bitrates from 16 to 128 kbps/channel." What is the difference between Hz and bitrate? Doesn't MP3 support higher bitrates? Pointers for more reading are welcome.
2018 May 04
0
RFC: Are auto-generated assertions a good practice?
On Fri, May 4, 2018 at 11:30 AM, David Blaikie <dblaikie at gmail.com> wrote: > > > On Fri, May 4, 2018 at 10:16 AM Sanjay Patel <spatel at rotateright.com> > wrote: > >> I understand the overfit argument (but in most cases it just shows that a >> unit test isn't minimized)... >> > > Even minimized tests sometimes need a few other things to
2015 Oct 07
4
Buildbot Noise
...ndary task. This has always been the case and until someone (LLVM Foundation?) starts investing in a better infrastructure overall (multi master, new slaves, admins), there isn't much we can do to improve that quick enough. The alternative is that the less common architectures will always have noisier bots because less people use them day-to-day, during their development time. By having a hard line on those, in the long run, means we'll disable most testing on all secondary architectures, and LLVM becomes an Intel compiler. But many companies use LLVM for their production compiler on their o...
2014 Dec 18
5
[LLVMdev] Postponing more passes in LTO
In the future could you please do some sort of visualization of your data, or at least provide the raw data in a machine-readable format so that others can do so? It is incredibly easy to come to incorrect conclusions when looking at lists of numbers because at any given moment you have a very localized view of the dataset and are prone to locally pattern-match and form a selection bias that
2018 May 04
2
RFC: Are auto-generated assertions a good practice?
On Fri, May 4, 2018 at 10:16 AM Sanjay Patel <spatel at rotateright.com> wrote: > I understand the overfit argument (but in most cases it just shows that a > unit test isn't minimized)... > Even minimized tests sometimes need a few other things to setup the circumstance (many DWARF tests, for example - produce the full DWARF output, but maybe you only care about one part of it
2015 Nov 05
8
"Living Downstream Without Drowning" BOF @ Dev Meeting
On 19 Oct 2015, at 19:05, Bruce Hoult via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > > I find the git imerge script extremely useful for this kind of situation. > > https://github.com/mhagger/git-imerge > > Logically, it does something similar to rebasing your local branch onto EVERY commit in the upstream branch, in turn, until it finds conflicts. There is
2016 May 17
2
[RFC] Helping release management
On 17 May 2016 at 17:25, Quentin Colombet <qcolombet at apple.com> wrote: > I do not see how the proposal goes against that policy. I certainly believe that the discussion should stay in the bugzilla, but I do not see why this is incompatible with the fact of summarizing some information in the commit message. > Basically what I tend to push for is self contained information for quick
2017 Dec 05
9
Who wants faster LLVM/Clang builds?
Hi, Recently I've done some experiments on the LLVM/Clang code and discovered that many of our source files often include unnecessary header files. I wrote a simple tool that eliminates redundant includes and estimates benefits of doing it, and the results were quite nice: for some files we were able to save 90% of compile time! I think we want to apply some of the cleanups I found, but