UModPlayer or Universal Module Player is a audio module "tool-chain",
providing you functions to work with modules like playing, exporting,
getting information, and more.
* You can play the supported formats and seek to any order in the
song. You have pause, timer, display, and other standard features.
* You can view the pattern notes while playing.
* Playlist support: you can create playlists, delete or move
individual items in a playlist, import a playlist from the current
directory contents, save a playlist and load a saved playlist...
* You can specify any of the ModPlug options: noise reduction,
megabass, surround, reverb sound options specifying the grade and
the delay of most of the options.
* You can export the audio data of a module to any of the supported
formats
* You can read and export to a file the song builtin message, the
song instrument names and the song sample names.
* Each user of your UNIX box can save all the sound options.
* And much more!
wavbreaker is a tool to take a wave file and break it up into
multiple wave files. It makes a clean break at the correct
position to burn the files to an audio CD without any dead
space between the tracks. It will only read wave files, so use
an appropriate tool to convert Ogg, MP3, etc. files and then
break them up. The GUI displays a summary of the entire wave
file being worked on at the top. There is also a command line
tool to merge wave files together (wavmerge). This tool will
only work on files that are alike. For example, 44100 khz
sample rate, 16-bit sample size, etc. (use sox to convert files
first if necessary).
WMalbum is a dock applet that displays album covers for songs being
played by XMMS. You must already have images of the album covers stored
near the file being played. WMAlbum provides a handy circular menu
for play/skip/etc, and can replace wmxmms. Although dock applets are
designed for the WindowMaker window manager, they also work in other
window managers including openbox and blackbox.
This package includes two programs for adjusting sound mixers: xmixer, which
uses the Athena toolkit, and xgmixer, based on GTK+. From the README:
Features:
* For every device which is supported by the sound card you can
change the volume via a slider. Unsupported devices are not shown.
* Select the input device(s) for recording.
* On startup a configuration file is read which restores device
settings.
* With a menu option you can save the current settings for the next
start up.
* Hide devices which you don't want to see.
* Batch support - just read and evaluate the settings in the
configuration file.
The Extended Module Player, or xmp, is a portable command-line module player
supports over 80 mainstream and obscure module formats from Amiga, Atari,
Acorn, Apple IIgs and PC.
xoscope is a digital oscilloscope using input from a sound card or EsounD
and/or a ProbeScope/osziFOX and will soon support Bitscope hardware.
Includes 8 signal displays, variable time scale, math, memory, measurements,
and file save/load.
ZynAddSubFX is a opensource software synthesizer capable of making
a countless number of instruments, from some common heard from
expensive hardware to interesting sounds that you'll boost to an
amazing universe of sounds.
The volume normalizer plugin is intended to change the volume of
playing songs to some level such that they all will basically sound
pretty much the same in terms of volume.
Filebench is quick to set up and use unlike many of the commercial
benchmarks which it can emulate. It is also a handy tool for
micro-benchmarking storage subsystems and studying the relationships of
complex applications such as relational databases with their storage
without having to incur the costs of setting up those applications,
loading data and so forth.
Filebench uses loadable workload personalities in a common framework to
allow easy emulation of complex applications upon file systems. The
workload personalities use a Workload Definition Language to define the
workload's model.
Flowgrind is an advanced TCP traffic generator for testing and
benchmarking Linux, FreeBSD, and Mac OS X TCP/IP stacks. In
contrast to similar tools like iperf or netperf it features a
distributed architecture, where throughput and other metrics are
measured between arbitrary flowgrind server processes.