Hi Johnny,
If you'd like to get some more info on sound programming, here's some
resources:
- Erik de Castro Lopo's tutorial on Audio / DSP programming:
http://www.mega-nerd.com/Res/IADSPL/
- The book "A Programmer's Guide to Sound" by Tim Kientzle:
http://www.amazon.com/Programmers-Guide-Sound-Tim-Kientzle/dp/0201419726
- The Signal Processing category on Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Signal_processing
- More papers etc. listed on the XIph.Org wiki:
http://wiki.xiph.org/index.php/Resources_and_papers_on_Audio%2C_Music_and_Speech
cheers,
Conrad.
On 06/12/06, Jean-Marc Valin <jean-marc.valin@usherbrooke.ca>
wrote:> Jonny Daenen a ?crit :
> > Narrowband (8 kHz), wideband (16 kHz), and ultra-wideband (32 kHz)
> > compression in the same bitstream
> >
> > What is the meaning of this? can i find more information about this
> > somewhere?
> >
> > And what is packel loss concealment, an you enable this somewhere?
>
> What are you expecting exactly here? That I explain what's a Hertz and
> what's a packet? I think asking your high-school teacher would be more
> appropriate. This mailing list isn't an interactive help system for
> people you can't distinguish a compiler from their left foot.
>
> That being said, I don't mind helping people here or even answering the
> occasional "silly" questions from people who just misunderstood
one of
> the fundamental concepts. I'm just not going to teach you how to
program
> in C, how computers represent sound as ones and zeros, or how to tie
> your shoe laces. Once you manage to write a simple application that
> works with uncompressed audio, then you probably won't find it too hard
> to use libspeex. Programming with libspeex should (rough guestimate) be
> within the capabilities of an average 1st-year CS/EE/CE student or a
> really good high-school kid.
>
> Jean-Marc
> _______________________________________________
> Speex-dev mailing list
> Speex-dev@xiph.org
> http://lists.xiph.org/mailman/listinfo/speex-dev
>
>