> - we are able to collect and compute all the necessary information with
> our senses and brain to perform this "switch off" ( i doubt that )
mmhmm.... maybe i shouldn't use such a superlative like "i doubt that"
here :) But it's definitely not a piece of cake, i never heard of
someone who can do such a thing and okay: There is a lot more to our
brain than what I can think of - haha! thats like a dog hunting his own
tail :)
-- Best regards, Sebastian. Web: linuxaudioblog.sternenhejim.de On Sat, 2008-02-23 at 10:11 +0100, Sebastian Tschöpel wrote: > > > A musician can be trained to mentally separate the parts of an > > > orchestra; why could not a machine do the same ? > > > > > @daemian > > There isn't just a big leap from machine to musician but also: You can > focus on (not seperate) certain instruments to quasi-isolate the > important part. Thats just a question of pratice. schoappied asked for a > program to "switch off" certain instruments which i doubt even a > conductor is able to do inside his brain. > > And when i said it's impossible, i thought of the possibilities that are > currently available. You could be right: This hasn't to be impossible at > - we would learn what these information are > - we could teach a machine to do that > > Thus, i think it would need a lot more, especially imagination :) > > @schoappied > > I forgot to ask: What do you want to do with the isolated tracks anyway? > Maybe there's another work-around. > _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@lists.linuxaudio.org http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-userReceived on Sat Feb 23 12:15:05 2008
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