libopenaptx
fdk-aac
Our great sponsors
libopenaptx | fdk-aac | |
---|---|---|
4 | 2 | |
119 | 1,130 | |
- | - | |
1.8 | 6.6 | |
almost 3 years ago | 29 days ago | |
C | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
libopenaptx
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License compatibility of libopenaptx and fdk-aac with openSUSE
Background: I use Tumbleweed for audio recording/production among other general use cases. This lead me to manually switch to pipewire before it was made the default recently. During my research before making the switch I learned that the pipewire packaged in openSUSE does not support aptx and AAC bluetooth codecs because dependencies libopenaptx (https://github.com/pali/libopenaptx) and fdk-aac (https://github.com/mstorsjo/fdk-aac) are missing. I believe LDAC support works despite it sometimes being referred to as "nonfree" due to libldac being packaged with openSUSE, but I have not confirmed this. Support for aptx is important to me so I installed the version from packman which is compiled with support for these codecs. However, this got me wondering if it is possible to provide aptx and AAC in openSUSE without needing to install it through packman.
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PipeWire 0.3.29 released Launchpad PPA (MX Linux supported)
License change: https://github.com/pali/libopenaptx/commit/811bc18586d634042618d633727ac0281d4170b8
fdk-aac
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So, how do you use the --sponsorblock-remove, exactly? Cos none of the ways I've tried worked.
Here is the licence: https://github.com/mstorsjo/fdk-aac/blob/2bda038c163298531d47394bc2c09e1409c5d0db/NOTICE
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License compatibility of libopenaptx and fdk-aac with openSUSE
Background: I use Tumbleweed for audio recording/production among other general use cases. This lead me to manually switch to pipewire before it was made the default recently. During my research before making the switch I learned that the pipewire packaged in openSUSE does not support aptx and AAC bluetooth codecs because dependencies libopenaptx (https://github.com/pali/libopenaptx) and fdk-aac (https://github.com/mstorsjo/fdk-aac) are missing. I believe LDAC support works despite it sometimes being referred to as "nonfree" due to libldac being packaged with openSUSE, but I have not confirmed this. Support for aptx is important to me so I installed the version from packman which is compiled with support for these codecs. However, this got me wondering if it is possible to provide aptx and AAC in openSUSE without needing to install it through packman.
What are some alternatives?
pipewire-debian - Upstream Version of pipewire, wireplumber, roc-toolkit & blueman for debian/ubuntu
FFmpeg-Builds - FFmpeg Builds for yt-dlp
pulseaudio-modules-bt - [Deprecated, see https://github.com/EHfive/pulseaudio-modules-bt/issues/154] Adds Sony LDAC, aptX, aptX HD, AAC codecs (A2DP Audio) support to PulseAudio on Linux
FFmpeg-Builds
opus - Modern audio compression for the internet.
xls - Pure Golang xls library
vorbis - Reference implementation of the Ogg Vorbis audio format.
libvorbis - Haskell binding for libvorbis, for decoding Ogg Vorbis audio files
arduino-liblame - A simple mp3 encoder (not only) for Arduino using LAME
SponsorBlock - Skip YouTube video sponsors (browser extension)
bzlib-conduit - Streaming compression/decompression via conduits.