aes67-linux-daemon
easyeffects
aes67-linux-daemon | easyeffects | |
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6 | 168 | |
318 | 5,961 | |
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6.2 | 9.8 | |
about 2 months ago | 3 days ago | |
C++ | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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aes67-linux-daemon
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Show HN: LinuxDAW – Quality audio software for Linux
> Aaand, this actually makes me want one of those cards myself!
heh, sorry!
Looks like I probably only searched for Dante virtual-soundcard before, when I searched for AES67 virtual soundcard I got [1] and [2] which may be the answer to my problems (if my machine can handle that many audio streams, but it should be able to with 64 cores haha!).
Looks like that's going to be my project tomorrow.
[1] https://github.com/bondagit/aes67-linux-daemon
[2] https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire/pipewire/-/wikis/AES...
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Ask HN: Does this USB audio device exist?
Have you considered using something like this: https://github.com/bondagit/aes67-linux-daemon
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AES67 linux server
I thought about Debian11 + https://github.com/bondagit/aes67-linux-daemon
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Is it possible to use netjack with pipewire?
yeah Is in Sync but Is timed in second, not ms , but since you didn't talk about low latency i was thinking that other solutions were good too :) Have you checked https://github.com/bondagit/aes67-linux-daemon ?
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Reverse Engineering a Mysterious UDP Stream in My Hotel
Yeah, Sonos is very much the Apple of this space. A solid, user-friendly implementation of several pre-existing concepts into a cohesive product - no small task. I don't think the technologically important parts of this are patentable though, there's both prior art and the obviousness standard to worry about. But very much like Apple's 'rounded corners' case, they've gone after (IMO) obvious UI functionality for such a system to extract money from their competitors.
If you are just interested in the synchronized Audio-over-Ethernet part, AES67 is the industry standard, and a pretty complete open-source implementation can be found at https://github.com/bondagit/aes67-linux-daemon , though AES67 is itself a composition of existing standards, fundamentally it is mostly composed of SDP for sessions description, RTP for media, and PTP for clock sync, so you can build that out of a variety of implementations too.
For room correction you can look at https://drc-fir.sourceforge.net/ to generate FIR filter coefficients, then you can apply it in realtime with https://github.com/wwmm/easyeffects .
Of course some people just want it to work, then you can shell out for Sonos :p.
- AoIP Driver for Linux/ARM
easyeffects
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Improving perceived sound quality on the FW13.
Linux: EasyEffects (free and open-source)
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Speaker Support in Asahi Linux
For DSP, we already can do that using something like Easy Effects[1][2].
The biggest issue is acquiring proper impulse-response data. In theory, it has to be tuned per-model, so turning basically require pro-grade equipment and a recording studio. However, apparently many people assume Dolby is using the same profile for all laptops, so just copy-paste the same file here and there. Not really sure which is the real case.
Anyways, Asahi can ship DSP turned on by default because the distro is specific to Apple. That's how Apple boosts the quality of its hardware, and the same applies to a distro dedicated to it.
[1]: https://github.com/wwmm/easyeffects
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[Recommendation] Not necessary, but cool software to tweak your devices (webcam, keyboard etc.)
- Easy Effects: Effects for PipeWire applications; configure your speakers & microphones (e.g. noise reduction filter)
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Volume normalization
Easyeffects maybe.
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set a pre-amp for mic pipewire
EasyEffects could be a replacement for EqualizerAPO. You can do some gain staging there if you want, as well as a bunch of other stuff.
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Easy Effects: Audio effects for PipeWire applications
Is this a general comment meant to apply to anything or are you specifically talking about Easy Effects here?
It has installation instructions in the README, links to a wiki page with more information (https://github.com/wwmm/easyeffects/wiki/Package-Repositorie...), the application contains full documentation under the "Help" item in the menu (as many applications do) and they also have the same documentation online (https://wwmm.github.io/easyeffects/).
Not sure what more you could ask for?
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PipeWire 0.3.71
I guess they're referring to my tickets: https://github.com/wwmm/easyeffects/issues/2322 https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire/pipewire/issues/3198
What are some alternatives?
network-audio-controller - Control Audinate Dante network audio devices without Dante Controller
pulseeffects - Limiter, compressor, convolver, equalizer and auto volume and many other plugins for PipeWire applications [Moved to: https://github.com/wwmm/easyeffects]
aes67-monitor - AES67 Stream Monitor: Monitor AES67 streams directly
noise-suppression-for-voice - Noise suppression plugin based on Xiph's RNNoise
mai - Mark's AES67 Implementation
NoiseTorch - Real-time microphone noise suppression on Linux.
OpenHD - OpenHD
EasyEffects-Presets - Collection of PulseEffects presets
SATPI - SATIP server for linux, suitable to run on an Raspberry Pi, Vu+, GigaBlue or any other linux box. currently supporting DVB-S/S2/T/C and transform DVB-S requests to DVB-C
pulseeffects-presets - Collection of community-made presets for PulseEffects tailored for TUXEDO laptops.
AutoEq - Automatic headphone equalization from frequency responses
JDSP4Linux - An audio effect processor for PipeWire and PulseAudio clients