Displaying 20 results from an estimated 4000 matches similar to: "AW: Why the commotion about file extensions?"
2003 Jul 17
1
AW: AW: Why the commotion about file extensions?
> All true. But note what the user wants according to these definition:
> he wants different icons for audio vs. video. Yes, he doesn't know
> the difference between `.mp3` and `.ogg`. But that's precisely why
> windows hides the extensions from him by default. If he does know, he
> would have disabled this hiding.
Exactly. The main reason for different extensions from
2003 Jul 17
1
AW: AW: AW: AW: Why the commotion about file extensions?
> Good point. File extensions normally represent groups of related
> formats. I don't propose differentiating everything (e.g. standalone
> FLAC from Ogg FLAC). I do want as a minimum to tell apart these
> categories:
>
> - Lossy audio: Vorbis, Speex. But speech is useful to distinguish
> from music, so making Speex separate is not a bad idea.
> - Lossless audio:
2003 Jul 17
1
AW: AW: AW: Why the commotion about file extensions?
> > That might be true. However, the main problem I see with this is
> > that by using only the codecs as the extension you make it
> > impossible to filter for audio/video without knowing all the codecs.
> > You cannot easily do file searches without specifying all those
> > extensions either.
> >
> Nor can filter audio/video without specifying all of `wma`,
2002 Nov 13
2
Audio/video synchronization in ogm files
Hi!
I made an ogm file with ogg audio and divX video. When I play it, sound and movie are not well synchronous (I played it with WMP and ashampoo). What can I do?
NB: I know that this problem does not come from the audio and the divX video files, since when I make a mp3/divX avi file, it works.
Sincerely,
Frédéric.
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Ogg project
2001 Nov 15
0
Ogg Traffic for November 13, 2001
Better late than never :)
jack.
---
Ogg Traffic for Tuesday, November 13, 2001
Jack Moffitt
<[1]jack@xiph.org>
_________________________________________________________________
Table of Contents
1. [2]Support The Ogg Project
2. [3]Status Updates
2.1. [4]Stan Seibert
2.2. [5]Chris Wolf
3. [6]New Developments
3.1. [7]Ogg On A Chip
2005 Apr 22
1
Lower bit rates crashing ices
Hello,
I'm using ices-2.0.1 as part of an experimental art/music project in
which I am creating internet-based feedbackloops running between a
single server running ices, and multiple servers running icecast. Part
of what I'm interested in are the artifacts created through the
compression process. Because of that, I'm trying to tweak ices to do the
heaviest compression possible on the
2017 Jun 01
35
.ogg extension and Theora
>Paul E Wrote
[snip]
>Windows 2000 (although it's the same for all of them) doesn't read in
>any mime-type to correctly identify a file, it just uses the extension.
[snip]
What if, at least for Windows, someone wrote a simple application which when
associated with .ogg files and an .ogg file was opened simply read enough of
the ogg stream to identify the type of content and then
2013 Oct 14
2
Bandwidth Usage
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013, Basil Mohamed Gohar wrote:
> To: icecast at xiph.org
> From: Basil Mohamed Gohar <basilgohar at librevideo.org>
> Subject: Re: [Icecast] Bandwidth Usage
>
> On 10/14/2013 12:42 PM, Keith Roberts wrote:
>> If there is no sound input on the client audio stream being
>> sent to the icecast server does this mean there is no
>> bandwidth
2000 Nov 22
4
more vorbis press!
http://news.webnoize.com/item.rs?ID=11136
or
Quietly Slipping into Audio Software, Vorbis Wants to Dethrone MP3
by Mark Lewis
Confident they can oust the MP3 format from dominance,
developers of Ogg Vorbis, an
open-source, royalty-free audio encoding format, say they are
making headway, getting their
technology into software players, portable devices and
2000 Nov 22
4
more vorbis press!
http://news.webnoize.com/item.rs?ID=11136
or
Quietly Slipping into Audio Software, Vorbis Wants to Dethrone MP3
by Mark Lewis
Confident they can oust the MP3 format from dominance,
developers of Ogg Vorbis, an
open-source, royalty-free audio encoding format, say they are
making headway, getting their
technology into software players, portable devices and
2002 Oct 28
0
Ashampoo
for anyone that didnt know,
Ogg Vorbis Support!
Ashampoo Media Player+ also supports the exciting new Ogg Vorbis compressed
audio format, which may well become the successor to MP3. Check it out at
the Ogg Vorbis website. <was a link to www.vorbis.com>
downloadable free at www.ashampoo.com
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2003 Jan 02
6
Re: Ogg Internet Drafts - create application/ogg-vorbis, application/ogg-tarkin, etc.
Dear David,
I hope it's ok to forward your email to the developer lists. I have not
seen a comprehensive scheme for MIME type naming and file extensions for
ogg files yet - please anybody put me in the picture if there is.
However, I have seen application/x-ogg used for ogg-vorbis files, which
is according to MIME type registration rules an unregistered and
experimental MIME type (see
2003 Jan 02
6
Re: Ogg Internet Drafts - create application/ogg-vorbis, application/ogg-tarkin, etc.
Dear David,
I hope it's ok to forward your email to the developer lists. I have not
seen a comprehensive scheme for MIME type naming and file extensions for
ogg files yet - please anybody put me in the picture if there is.
However, I have seen application/x-ogg used for ogg-vorbis files, which
is according to MIME type registration rules an unregistered and
experimental MIME type (see
2003 Jan 02
6
Re: Ogg Internet Drafts - create application/ogg-vorbis, application/ogg-tarkin, etc.
Dear David,
I hope it's ok to forward your email to the developer lists. I have not
seen a comprehensive scheme for MIME type naming and file extensions for
ogg files yet - please anybody put me in the picture if there is.
However, I have seen application/x-ogg used for ogg-vorbis files, which
is according to MIME type registration rules an unregistered and
experimental MIME type (see
2001 Jan 13
1
DWIT
Hi,
I'm interested in helping out with the Vorbis and Tarkin projects (in my
already limited time!). I don't have an extensive background in all of the
mathematics involved, but it looks like my mathematics from undergrad Physics
is good enough to get a grasp on it.
In the past few days I've started doing some reading on the mathematical
basics. As part of my reading, I found
2006 Oct 20
3
Extension .v+ogg does work
Hello everyone,
As discussed on last Monthly Meeting, Monty settled on recommending
the extension .v+ogg for Theora files IF it would work on Linux.
Probably many have tested it already, but I haven't seen anything said
publically, so for the record, v+ogg works on both Windows and Linux.
Hadn't a chance to test it on Mac OS X, but I'm sure it should work
there too. And Plan 9 :)
2001 Jan 26
5
ogg pic format (again).. here's why
I sent a little mail some time ago asking if there was going to be an ogg
pic-format, and you replied that PNG, MNG and JNG is good enough (sorry for
this late answer btw).. But, consider this: The ogg video-format (tarkin ?
where do you get these names from anyway ? :) ) needs a way to compress its
frames. Are you going to use MNG for that ? :) ..
If you had an ogg pic format, that format could
2001 Jan 03
2
Tarkin at last
For all the curious:
http://www.vorbis.com/~jack/tarkin-experimental.tar.gz
ome instructions:
tar xzvf tarkin-experimental.tar.gz
cd tarkin
make
./tarkin 95
./tarkinplayer output.tark
You'll need SDL and SDL-devel if you don't already have them.
jack.
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2001 Jan 03
2
Tarkin at last
For all the curious:
http://www.vorbis.com/~jack/tarkin-experimental.tar.gz
ome instructions:
tar xzvf tarkin-experimental.tar.gz
cd tarkin
make
./tarkin 95
./tarkinplayer output.tark
You'll need SDL and SDL-devel if you don't already have them.
jack.
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2001 Jul 16
3
file magic for Ogg, Vorbis?
I am trying to figure out file(1) magic(1) for Ogg and Vorbis.
(I am using file from NetBSD 1.5.1.)
Currently I have:
0 string OggS Ogg data
>29 string vorbis \b, Vorbis audio
Some results:
$ file ~/audio/kaas.*
/home/reed/audio/kaas.mp3: MP3, 128 kBits, 44.1 kHz, Stereo
/home/reed/audio/kaas.ogg: Ogg data, Vorbis audio
/home/reed/audio/kaas.wav: RIFF (little-endian) data, WAVE audio,