similar to: libogg++ release 1.1.0

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 500 matches similar to: "libogg++ release 1.1.0"

2009 Jun 05
2
libogg++ release 1.1.0
(Sorry, Sylvia, about the duplicate, hit the wrong reply button.) On Fri, 2009-06-05 at 08:07 +1000, Silvia Pfeiffer wrote: > Hi Elaine, > > I flipped through some of the code but wasn't really about to > determine this: Do you also support Skeleton in libogg++ ? Hi, Silvia. I studied your multi-track work when I was working on ALingA. It was a valuable guide. No, libogg++ tries
2009 Jun 08
2
libogg++ release 1.1.0
On Tue, 2009-06-09 at 00:12 +1000, Silvia Pfeiffer wrote: > On Sat, Jun 6, 2009 at 6:23 AM, ter<et at ihear.com> wrote: > >> If you are creating multitrack Ogg files, they should contain a > >> skeleton track to identify the different contained tracks. > >> http://wiki.xiph.org/OggSkeleton > > ALingA is a multitrack format > >
2009 Jun 04
0
libogg++ release 1.1.0
Hi Elaine, I flipped through some of the code but wasn't really about to determine this: Do you also support Skeleton in libogg++ ? If you are creating multitrack Ogg files, they should contain a skeleton track to identify the different contained tracks. http://wiki.xiph.org/OggSkeleton And if the files aren't audio or video files, you should then use the extension .ogx
2008 Nov 03
0
No subject
BTW: I am acutally started to implement the ogg skeleton handling ... - Yorn > Hi everybody, > > I posted here about two years ago about the initial release. This is a > release that fixes many bugs, and has enhancements that make it possible > to support a multi-stream format, ALingA, which I will mention briefly > later. It also supports a PCM format, Neuro, both as part of
2009 Jun 09
0
libogg++ release 1.1.0
On Tue, Jun 9, 2009 at 9:23 AM, ter<et at ihear.com> wrote: > On Tue, 2009-06-09 at 00:12 +1000, Silvia Pfeiffer wrote: >> On Sat, Jun 6, 2009 at 6:23 AM, ter<et at ihear.com> wrote: >> >> If you are creating multitrack Ogg files, they should contain a >> >> skeleton track to identify the different contained tracks. >> >>
2009 Jun 09
3
libogg++ release 1.1.0
On Wed, 2009-06-10 at 00:00 +1000, Silvia Pfeiffer wrote: > > My applications are in speech processing. I have been using the .ala > > extension (has sort of a ring to it). There is a small database in the > > FreeCLAS project that has been dispensing .alas to the public. But not > > to worry, it has not attained social networking status. I am about to > > update it
2009 Jun 08
0
libogg++ release 1.1.0
On Sat, Jun 6, 2009 at 6:23 AM, ter<et at ihear.com> wrote: > (Sorry, Sylvia, about the duplicate, hit the wrong reply button.) > On Fri, 2009-06-05 at 08:07 +1000, Silvia Pfeiffer wrote: >> Hi Elaine, >> >> I flipped through some of the code but wasn't really about to >> determine this: Do you also support Skeleton in libogg++ ? > Hi, Silvia. I studied
2007 Jan 17
2
libogg++ seeking w/o metric
Hi all, I started out looking for a multi-stream format, which led naturally to Ogg. I have been studying your web sites and code, and subscribed to this list. Eventually we would like to have a multi-stream codec which would have a discontinuous text component. In the meantime, I am working on running the transport/en- de-capsulation on a separate thread, and possibly with each codec on a
2007 May 02
2
libogg++ release 0.1.1
On 02/05/07, Elaine YueLien <et@ihear.com> wrote: > Hi, > > Several months ago, I asked a question about seeking without a metric. > You can find one answer in this beta release, demonstrated in the > example program multiThreadSeek. There is also an example demuxer, and a > rewriter. Hi Elaine, congratulations :-) that's a nicely designed API you've got there.
2007 May 02
0
libogg++ release 0.1.1
Hi Conrad, Just a word of thanks to you and other authors at xiph for your work. libogg++ is not meant to duplicate functionality that libogg and liboggz already provide. Rather, it offers a different partitioning of logical from transport, and is oriented to threaded execution. On Wed, 2007-05-02 at 20:42 +0900, Conrad Parker wrote: > Just to make sure we're not using the same word to
2010 Feb 02
9
handling multitrack Ogg
(cc-ed to theora-dev because that will reach a larger audience - please reply to only one mailing list.) Hi all, In discussions with the video accessibility subgroup of the W3C HTML working group, we are currently looking at how to deal with multitrack video, e.g. such video that has a main video and audio track, plus e.g. a sign language video track, an audio description audio track, a caption
2010 Feb 02
9
handling multitrack Ogg
(cc-ed to theora-dev because that will reach a larger audience - please reply to only one mailing list.) Hi all, In discussions with the video accessibility subgroup of the W3C HTML working group, we are currently looking at how to deal with multitrack video, e.g. such video that has a main video and audio track, plus e.g. a sign language video track, an audio description audio track, a caption
2010 Feb 02
9
handling multitrack Ogg
(cc-ed to theora-dev because that will reach a larger audience - please reply to only one mailing list.) Hi all, In discussions with the video accessibility subgroup of the W3C HTML working group, we are currently looking at how to deal with multitrack video, e.g. such video that has a main video and audio track, plus e.g. a sign language video track, an audio description audio track, a caption
2004 Sep 24
2
strange behavior of ipsec tunnel mode
hello i am trying to set up ipsec in my network, for now just between two hosts, using to use AH & ESP in tunnel mode to get all of packet encrypted. keys are negotiated with racoon. mayby using tunnel mode in this case can seems strange, but i know what i am doing. after setting up everything i have done few tests with ping & tcpdump. but the results are very suprising. bellow is what i
2008 Nov 14
3
FreeBSD 6.3 gre and traceroute
Stephen Clark wrote: > Robert Noland wrote: >> On Thu, 2008-11-13 at 07:48 -0500, Stephen Clark wrote: >>> Julian Elischer wrote: >>>> Stephen Clark wrote: >>>>> Julian Elischer wrote: >>>>>> you will need to define the setup and question better. >>>> thanks.. cleaning it up a bit more... >>>> >>>>
2023 Jan 12
1
Reg: ggplot error
Hallo I am not familiar with any of packages you use (except of MASS and ggplot2) and the code is too complicated without any hint where the error could come from and what is the message you get. I wonder if anybody would like to go through your whole code. 1. data seems to be read correctly ICUData <- read.csv(file = "ICUData.csv", stringsAsFactors = TRUE) ICUData.neuro <-
2007 May 26
14
[Bug 570] PREROUTING is unaware of VLAN interfaces
https://bugzilla.netfilter.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=570 kaber@trash.net changed: What |Removed |Added ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Status|NEW |RESOLVED Resolution| |INVALID ------- Additional Comments From kaber@trash.net 2007-05-26
2012 Apr 15
2
xyplot type="l"
Probably a stupidly simple question, but I wouldn't know how to google it: xyplot(neuro ~ time | UserID, data=data_sub) creates a proper plot. However, if I add type = "l" the lines do not go first through time1, then time2, then time3 etc but in about 50% of all subjects the lines go through points seemingly random (e.g. from 1 to 4 to 2 to 5 to 3). The lines always start at time
2001 Mar 20
1
Neuro Net Recordings now provides Ogg Vorbis products
For Immediate Press Release Neuro Net Recordings public relations contact: Kenji Rikitake, e-mail only, at kenji@nnr.to Neuro Net Recordings Website Address: www.nnr.to NEURO NET RECORDINGS NOW PROVIDES OGG VORBIS PRODUCTS FREE ONLINE TOYONAKA CITY, OSAKA, JAPAN, March 21, 2001 - Neuro Net Recordings (NNR), an independent electronic music label, has announced that the NNR online products are
2006 Jun 19
2
saving rounded numbers as a new variable in a dataframe
A basic question, but one that eludes me. I have created a new variable $numurder, which I have rounded off. I want to save the rounded off version of this variable to an existing datafile called 'ngri.csv' . numurder <-c((murder*no.of.cases)/100) [[1]] [1] 48.952 112.073 182.160 974.610 122.140 663.432 150.856 18.988 137.925 198.045 68.930 203.148 30.056 100.955