Displaying 5 results from an estimated 5 matches for "streap".
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2002 Jul 06
1
radiomatic featuring a reading
Streaming and On-Air Performance for everyone.
LAST DAY WITH A LIVE READING FROM WEIMAR, GERMANY
2.7.2002 - 6.7.2002, daily 8:00pm - 0:00am
Weimar, Germany, On Air: 106,6 Mhz
http://www.radiostudio.org/streaps
contact: streaps@radiostudio.org
Everybody is welcome to connect with our new online mixing tool STREAPS
<p><p><p>--- >8 ----
List archives: http://www.xiph.org/archives/
Ogg project homepage: http://www.xiph.org/ogg/
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2002 Jul 05
1
radiomatic
Streaming and On-Air Performance for everyone.
2.7.2002 - 6.7.2002, daily 8:00pm - 0:00am
Weimar, Germany, On Air: 106,6 Mhz
http://www.radiostudio.org/streaps
contact: streaps@radiostudio.org
Everybody is welcome to connect with our new online mixing tool STREAPS
<p>RadioMatic is a on-line coop-system initiated by Jerome Joy and Ralf
Homann
between two art schools: Villa Arson in Nice (France) and Bauhaus Weimar
(Germany) and specially between...
2008 Oct 03
8
Flash Vorbis player
Hi,
I wanted to let you know that I have just made available the sources
to the ogg + vorbis implementation in haXe, which I've been working on
for last couple of weeks. The code compiles to an swf file playable in
Flash Player 10.
A demo of a simple player implementation (latest Flash 10 required):
http://people.xiph.org/~arek/pg/hx/test.html
and the sources, in a bzr branch, currently
2008 Oct 03
8
Flash Vorbis player
Hi,
I wanted to let you know that I have just made available the sources
to the ogg + vorbis implementation in haXe, which I've been working on
for last couple of weeks. The code compiles to an swf file playable in
Flash Player 10.
A demo of a simple player implementation (latest Flash 10 required):
http://people.xiph.org/~arek/pg/hx/test.html
and the sources, in a bzr branch, currently
2008 Nov 27
1
dynamics, clipping, 0 dBFS
I have some questions about how a sample is encoded in Vorbis
regarding the dynamic range. I try to figured it out by reading the
Vorbis spec and I failed. But I found this quote from Monty:
?Vorbis, BTW, can handle, for sake of programming simplicity, >200dB
range. Just for kicks.? [1]
It's still unclear to me what that means. Should I think of Vorbis as
a floating-point format or a