I was wondering where I may find a good C/C++ implementation of the 3DMC mesh coding algorithm which appears in the MPEG4 standard.
Thanks,
Debarati.
http://www.mymultimediaworld.com/
is the place,
SC3DMC is the exact standard, it features faster decoding than the older 3DMC standard.
The implementation works well in windows, in linux some tweeks are required,
Best,
Rufael
Related
I'm using the Accelerate Framework to improve performance of an audio mixer, with very good results on iOS and OSX. I'm trying to achieve similar results on other platforms and cpu architectures - the usual suspects ( ARM android, x86 x64 PCs ).
I've investigated Yeppp!, which provides a nice C# wrapper, but which only covers very basic operations: no stride can be specified, no ramp functions for vector generation or processing neither ( vDSP_vrampmul is great… ), and no clipping neither.
Does anyone know of a cross platform SIMD library with a similar, audio DSP friendly API?
[ EDIT ]As Paul recommends, KissFFT seems perfect for frequency domain work, so what's left are simpler time domain operations.
Many thanks in advance,
Gregzo
At the risk of promoting our own product, I'd suggest http://Superpowered.com, cross-platform (iOS & Android) pro audio SDK/library.
The Superpowered stereo mixer can be used to ‘split’ interleaved signals to non-interleaved, see here:
http://superpowered.com/pro-audio-sdk-update-android-arm-and-x86-64-bit-positioning/
I am looking for an audio dsp library for cleaning up some speech (voice) recording. I have not decided which language to use yet.
Here are the feature I am looking for:
Work in Linux and Windows
Importing MP3
Working with multiple channels mixing
Noise Filter
Bandpass filter
Compressor
I love to have these as well, but I can write my own if they are not available:
De-esser
multi-band compressor
Expender
Envelopes
(if you can suggest an application that do these in scripting / one mouse click, I will accept your answer too)
What about something like SoX?? http://sox.sourceforge.net/
Take a look at Juce from Raw Material Software.
It is free for non-commercial use, and very reasonably priced for commercial use. it also has a lot of built in audio capabilities (mixing, file I/O, etc.) and has a nice cross platform GUI toolkit as well.
Audacity does most of those things.
I'm looking for an audio processing language or library which will allow me to experiment with different synthesis techniques. I've looked at Processing which I think is great at what it does, but haven't found any inspiring (and simple) audio libraries.
As a baseline, I want to simply create my own sample buffers and play them back (ideally in realtime). As a plus, the ability to handle MIDI events would be great. I'm an experienced C++ programmer so I could do it natively on but had hoped there was a more DSL (domain specific language) approach.
I have access to Windows, Mac or Linux so not too bothered yet about platform. Other languages I can deal with are C#, Java & Python.
Thanks
James
Depending on how much you want to stay out of the low-level housekeeping details, you may want to look at CSound , or if you want to not actually write code, the patching-based system PureData is great to work with. As #Lou points out, ChucK is interesting (but was too buggy to use the last time I checked it out).
If you really do want to write code, look at the Synthesis Toolkit, a set of C++ classes for audio processing and synthesis.
For an app framework, I recommend JUCE, which has incredibly nice cross-platform handling of audio/midi IO and GUI elements.
Max MSP is an audio production tool that is highly expressive.
I guess you could say it's a high-level tool, and not a low-level programming language. My impression of it is that it's geared towards the technical musician or the artistic engineer, but anyway it kicks ass and you could go low-level with it if you want.
I've always been a big fan of SuperCollider. It's designed for Mac OS X but also works on Linux.
The language is mostly based on SmallTalk, and it's pretty easy to pick up if you understand the basics of functional programming. The quality of the sound output by the SC Server is very good and there is plenty of documentation both built into the app environment and available online.
One interesting point of SuperCollider is the usage on android devices, and it's intercommunication with python trough out other modules.
Here goes an example
I know you didn't say Ruby, but check out Archaeopteryx
https://github.com/gilesbowkett/archaeopteryx/wiki
or ChucK
http://chuck.cs.princeton.edu/
Have a look at NAudio, an open source .NET audio SDK for working with audio files and devices in Windows. Some features include:
http://naudio.codeplex.com/
NAudio Features:
Play back audio using a variety of APIs
Decompress audio from different Wave Formats
Record audio using WaveIn, WASAPI or ASIO
Read and Write standard .WAV files
Mix and manipulate audio streams using a 32 bit floating mixing engine
Extensive support for reading and writing MIDI files
Full MIDI event model
Basic support for Windows Mixer APIs
A collection of useful Windows Forms Controls
Some basic audio effects, including a compressor
If its not relevant here, pls. move to correct place.
I want to find out which all vendors/companies have developed multi-threaded video codecs(decoders , encoders) as commercial products? Not opensource solutions like libavcodec/x264/ffdshow etc... but commercial solutions for which one can obtain licenses/performance numbers of those solutions.
thanks,
-AD.
MainConcept has some excellent codec options. They offer support for multi-threading as well as support for hardware accelerated encoding:
MainConcept Codec SDK
In my opinion they offer the best performance and quality (no I do not work for MainConcept).
I've searched the net but didn't found anything interesting. Maybe I'm doing something wrong.
I'm looking for sound synthesis API written on C, C++ or even Objective-C, which can synthesize different types of waves, effects are optional.
Here's a complete library/toolkit for FM (Frequency Modulation) synthesis:
link1
link2
If you have time to spare... creating simple sound synthesis from scratch is actually a fun endeavor. If you create a small buffer of 256 16 bit samples which represent either a sine. a sawtooth, block or pulse, you can copy these to a live audiobuffer (e.g. a small buffer (say 16kb)) which constantly loops. By staying ahead of the playposition, and constantly filling up the buffer with new values, you can create the soundoutput.
You can use the small buffers to combine these in interesting ways (simplest is just to add them together (additive synthesis)).
The frequency of the tone can be manipulated by using a bigger or smaller sampling step through the small buffers. Amplitude can be manipulated by scaling the samples before putting them into the output buffer.
Great fun experimenting with this!
If you have this step nailed, you can add more sophisticated effects like filters (low pass, high pass, etc) and effects (reverbs, echoes, etc)
R
Have you looked at the synthesis toolkit (STK)? It's in C++ (I don't think ObjC is the right language for audio synthesis, in fact audio units, Apple's own way of doing audio stuff, including generators/filters/effects... is in C++).
STK will run on Mac OS X, and iOS no problem (CoreAudio is supported), but will also run on Linux and Windows (Direct sound and ASIO), using RtAudio. It's really nicely done and lightweight, these guys have spent a lot of time thinking about it and it will definitely give you a big head start. It can handle loads of different audio file formats + midi (and hopefully OSC soon...).
There is also Create and CLAM which is huge, these include GUI components and many other things which you might or might not want. If you're only interested in doing sound synthesis I really recommend STK.
PortAudio is also a great C API that we used last semester in an audio programming course. It provides an audio callback...what more could you need!?
I haven't tried incorporating it with anything in Objective-C yet, but will report back when I do.
Writing audio synthesis algorithms in C/obj-C is quite difficult in my opinion. I would recommend writing your signal processing algorithms using PureData and then use ZenGarden or libpd to embed and interpret the pd patches in your app.
Another C++ library is nsound:
http://nsound.sourceforge.net
One can generate any kind of modulated signal using the Generator class or using the provided Sine class. Each time-step can have it's own instantaneous frequency and phase offset.
You can also experiment with the Python module to prototype your algorithm quickly, then implement in C++. It can produce pretty matplotlib plots from Python and even from C++!
Have you looked at CSound? It's an incredibly flexible audio generation platform, and can handle everything from simple waveform generation to FM synthesis and all kinds of filters. It also provides MIDI support, and you can extend it by writing custom opcodes. There's a full C API and several C++ APIs as well.