On Wed, Jun 22, 2011 at 12:56:09AM +0200, Julien Claassen wrote:
> I could see something, which wouldn't be realtime, but perhaps
> workable. You might operate with 200 bands and then finally print the
> bands, that had clipping, very loud peaks or something of the sort. I
> think it could be done. You analyse, log each of the volumes in one
> variable, incrementing it, when necessary and then you compare them and
> print out the 10 highest bands. Probably the criterion should be more
> like: print all above xDB. Or xDB above average. Nevger having used
> something like it, I wouldn't know by what to go. Well I think a good
> deal of users might not know the citerion behind it, but just pick the
> peaks out.
And then ? What are you going to do with e.g. a list of the ten
highest bands ? Do you really think that doing some filtering on
those frequencies is going to improve your mix or levels ?
Ciao,
-- FA _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@email-addr-hidden http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-userReceived on Wed Jun 22 12:15:04 2011
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