Hi...
I'm currently writing a VoIP app as well and was wondering what
language you were useing and it i could maybe look at you code.. I'm
having issues with too much cpu useage i was wanting to look at you code
to see how you were recording and encoding, threads? or all at once?
-Dragon
(dragon@dazoe.net)
(www.dazoe.net)
Fabio wrote:> Hi to all,
>
> I developed a VoIP application using Speex. Now i want to record the
> conversation to a file.
> As i have two indipendent thread transmitting e receiving voice i
> whish to mix both audio streams in one stream before saving the
> conversation to a file.
>
> I'm using Speex in narrow band mode, 8 bits per sample, mono.
>
> i found at this link
>
> http://www.vttoth.com/digimix.htm
>
> a simple way to mix audio:
>
> ".........Let's say we have two signals, A and B. If A is quiet,
we
> want to hear B on the output in unaltered form. If B is quiet, we want
> to hear A on the output (i.e., A and B are treated symmetrically.) If
> both A and B have a non-zero amplitude, the mixed signal must have an
> amplitude between the greater of A and B, and the maximum permissible
> amplitude.
> ....................
> In a practical implementation, the signal values are not between 0 and
> 1, but between 0 and some maximum integer value, such as 255 for 8-bit
> signals. So the equation needs to be normalized. For 8-bit audio, the
> normalized version looks like this:
>
> Z = A + B - A?B / 256
>
> When I tested this mixing method, I got the expected result: as I
> mixed multiple audio streams I heard the contributing signals clearly,
> without distortion or loss of volume......."
>
> This kind of argument is applicable to Speex encoded audio or i have
> to decode audio first, mix the two streams and the re-encode it?
>
> Best regard
> Fabio