SHOUTcast Distributed Network Audio Server 2.0 (or DNAS for short) is
the next-generation SHOUTcast server technology, designed to work with
the new YP 2.0 playform that supports real-time and coming soon search
results, international chatacter encoding support, and much more!
The Snack Sound Toolkit is designed to be used with a scripting language
such as Tcl/Tk or Python. Using Snack you can create powerful multi-platform
audio applications with just a few lines of code. Snack has commands for
basic sound handling, e.g. sound card and disk I/O. Snack also has primitives
for sound visualization, e.g. waveforms and spectrograms. It was developed
mainly to handle digital recordings of speech, but is just as useful for
general audio. Snack has also successfully been applied to other one-
dimensional signals.
The combination of Snack and a scripting language makes it possible to create
sound tools and applications with a minimum of effort. This is due to the
rapid development nature of scripting languages. As a bonus you get an
application that is cross-platform from start. It is also easy to integrate
Snack based applications with existing sound analysis software.
MIDI Player Pro allows you to play any kind of MIDI music in seconds
with your fingertips. List of supported features:
- Raw MIDI.
- Jack MIDI.
- Import from lyrics sites (chorded lyrics)
- Import from GuitarPro v3 and v4 format.
- Loading and saving from and to standard v1.0 MIDI files.
- Realtime MIDI processing.
- Simple sequence looping.
- 30000 BPM MIDI recording and playback.
- Undo/Redo support.
- Printing music like PDF.
Sphinx 3 is a frontend to the sphinxbase, a large-vocabulary,
speaker-independent, continuous speech recognition engine.
Once the system is built, try running the Perl script sphinx3-demo.
The sphinx3-test script should run sphinx3-batch over an example
utterance of "go forward ten meters."
Sphinx Base is part of a large-vocabulary, speaker-independent, continuous
speech recognition engine.
This port is required for PocketSphinx and Sphinx3
Once the system is built, try running the Perl script sphinx-demo.
The sphinx-test script should run sphinx-batch over an example
utterance of "go forward ten meters."
SpiralLoops is an experimental loop-based sampler for Linux and FreeBSD.
The idea of SpiralLoops is to provide a simple, visual tool for looping
and layering of sounds; which can be sourced from either WAV files on disk,
or from sound-generating plugins.
SpiralLoops allows you to create loop-based compositions with the minimum
feedback time between the decisions you make and your ears. The looping
mechanism is very flexible; you can lock the timing of loops together, or
offset them for creating complex sequences, such as polyrhythms.
Loop triggers can be used to cause interaction between the loops, and as
an experimental way of creating music.
adapted from the Web page and the README:
Spiral Synth is a physically modelled, monophonic, analogue
synthesizer. It is capable of creating the kind of sounds made by
hardware analogue synths, the noises used in electronic music.
You can also use it to make stranger sounds. MIDI is supported,
including velocity detection, mapped to the volume of the oscillators
(but you can also use the PC keyboard to play the synth). Output
is to /dev/dsp or in Microsoft RIFF (.WAV) format to a file. You
can save and recall your sounds using the 100 patch save slots.
The PC keyboard can be used to play the synth, "q" & "z" are C,
and the keys progress from them: "2" is C#, "w" is D, etc. These
are just the defaults, and can be changed from the .Spiralrc file.
The function keys change the octave.
Sample output and a detailed list of features can be found on the
home page.
Trevor Johnson
SSM is an object-oriented modular softsynth/sequencer/sampler.
You can use it in a fairly straight forward way to make tracks with,
or get very experimental. Audio or control data can be freely passed
between the plugins, there is no difference. Data can also be fed
back on itself for chaotic effects.
libgpod is a shared library to access the contents of an iPod and
optionally iPhone (via `comms/libimobiledevice' library port, enabled
by default).
This code was originally part of gtkpod itself. When the parsing code
was made self-contained with gtkpod v0.93, decision was made to put
this code in a separate library so that other projects can benefit
from it without duplicating code.
libgpod supports playlists, smart playlists, playcounts, ratings,
podcasts, cover art, audio and video. Photo support is implemented as
well. Python and Mono bindings are optionally available too.
Sweep is an audio editor and live playback tool for GNU/Linux, BSD and
compatible systems. It supports many music and voice formats including
WAV, AIFF, Ogg Vorbis, Speex and MP3, with multichannel editing and
LADSPA effects plugins.