noise-repellent
Rack
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noise-repellent | Rack | |
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7 | 156 | |
428 | 3,960 | |
- | 0.4% | |
0.0 | 8.6 | |
6 months ago | about 12 hours ago | |
C | C++ | |
GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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noise-repellent
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Linux Audio Noise suppression using deep filtering in Rust
Frankly, what I hear is very similar to the results of classic spectral denoising, even with the characteristic artifacts (for Linux, there's Noise Repellent [1] available for advanced spectral denoising; there's also a ton of commercial spectral processors).
The demonstration could use more random background noises to separate it from spectral processors, and more varied vocabulary to separate it from RNNVoice [2] which tends to suppress breath and parts of sibilants, making the sound unnatural. The latency is also important - is it as low as in RNNVoice? What about the CPU load?
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Perks of having a LinuxAudio setup!
Plugins: LSP Plugins DISTRHO Plugins Calf Plugins TAP Plugins Noise-Repellent (The best thinge ever!)
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Upgrading from Audacity
The only thing it is missing natively which Audacity had built-in is background noise filtering; but that is easily accomplished with a plugin such as Lucian Dato's Noise Repellent.
Rack
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Ask HN: Comment here about whatever you're passionate about at the moment
> It’s haven’t bought any Modular’s yet but I’m really looking forward to getting into other on the new year.
The former is libre and gratis, runs as a standalone or plugin and in the browser!! and is based on the latter.
Ther former has a libre and gratis standalone version, the plugin version is non-gratis.
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Ask HN: Whats the modern day equivalent of 80s computer for kids to explore?
A music synthesizer. It's a pathway to learning electronics, music, and the nature of sound. There are cheap kits, cheap synths, lots of kinds of synths, and there are much more complicated and expensive systems you can grow into. You can get software synths also, VCV Rack is a free though complex one:
However I'd recommend an inexpensive hardware one with real knobs you can turn, like one of the Korg Volca series:
https://www.korg-volca.com/en/
Recording the sounds can lead into exploring all the concepts and gear involved in recording and mixing music. It's not mutually exclusive with doing other things also, you can play with both synths and computers and being involved with something artistic can add dimensions to and an escape from the nature of classwork/work.
Some other suggestions: gardening, high voltage electronics (with lots of supervision), electronics, photography, movie making, ham radio (gnu radio), show lighting systems (there's more than disco lights, robotics is involved), robotics, acoustic instruments (guitar, piano, flute, drums), sensors (you don't necessarily have to know electronics, get a data logger with built in sensors), weather monitoring/forecasting, hydraulic systems (with supervision), wood working, metal working, 3D printing, bird watching, painting, minibikes/small engines.
- What Is the Future of the DAW?
- Should I pull the trigger?
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Long time Cubase user who is leaving a more traditional electronic workflow to modular hardware... Bitwig seems to be the DAW more for this style possibly? Any opinions first hand?
Also I would suggest the paid version of VCV rack which works as a VST too ( the free version is just stand alone ) Expecially when experimenting with modular ( believe me, it can save you a fortune whilst you learn what different modules do ) I would also recommend Omri Cohens Youtube channel for learning this too.
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Show HN: Building musical synthesizers with SQL queries
I tend to open, and play, with https://github.com/VCVRack/Rack daily...
I haven't in the last few as I make horrific noises with SQL instead ;)
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Beginner - where to learn?
https://vcvrack.com/ goes even further . It really forces you however to think of synthesizers in their fundamental terms; if you're familiar with programming, TAL and Tyrell are more like higher-level languages while VCV is machine language. You can make anything, but you have to build everything from scratch .
- Interests in Generative, Electronic, Loop-Based, Computer Music?
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Get Into Music: Variety Pack Software Bundle
VCV Rack is going to be intimidating if you're a beginner (it's certainly intimidating to me), but if you have any interest in modular synthesis, this lets you emulate your own modular synth. Endless possibilities once you climb that learning curve
- Ask HN: What was the best software that you used during 2022?
What are some alternatives?
Cardinal - Virtual modular synthesizer plugin
BespokeSynth - Software modular synth
BespokeSynth - Software modular synth [Moved to: https://github.com/BespokeSynth/BespokeSynth]
pulsemixer - CLI and curses mixer for PulseAudio
zynthian-sys - System configuration scripts & files for Zynthian.
ncmpcpp - Featureful ncurses based MPD client inspired by ncmpc
curriculum - The open curriculum for learning web development
pavucontrol - Mirror of the PulseAudio Volume Control application (for bug reports and pull requests go to the website!)
JUCE - JUCE is an open-source cross-platform C++ application framework for desktop and mobile applications, including VST, VST3, AU, AUv3, LV2 and AAX audio plug-ins.
scheme-for-max - Max/MSP external for scripting and live coding Max with s7 Scheme Lisp
DaisySP - A Powerful DSP Library in C++
teensy-juno - A Teensy 3.x/4.x based polyphonic synthesizer, modelled after the Juno-106