Fabio, You can't mix encoded audio directly. You would have to decode, mix, and reencode. There will likely be some loss of quality. Tom Fabio <fabpet@gmail.com> 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 > _______________________________________________ > Speex-dev mailing list > Speex-dev@xiph.org > http://lists.xiph.org/mailman/listinfo/speex-dev > >