rnnoise
Papercups
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rnnoise | Papercups | |
---|---|---|
16 | 19 | |
3,568 | 5,615 | |
2.7% | 0.7% | |
4.7 | 0.0 | |
9 days ago | 2 months ago | |
C | Elixir | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | MIT License |
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rnnoise
- RNNoise 0.2 β now trained using only publicly available CC-licensed datasets
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Lyrebird the Linux voice changer now supports PipeWire
Sure.
Carla: https://github.com/falkTX/Carla
It lets me install any normal audio pro audio plugins, for example https://github.com/xiph/rnnoise
It also does some cable management, but qpwgraph is maybe better for that.
I looked at your code and the approach (IMO) is kind of bad.
If you want to solve the problem of "voice changer", you can skip the UI entirely and just use plugin parameters. You can also skip the problem of managing the connections. And when you publish your work, every pro audio software (Ableton, Reaper, whatever) can use your audio processing.
Hope that helps.
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Real-Time Noise Suppression for PipeWire writen in Rust
Interesting! How does it compare with NoiseTorch/RNNoise?
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GTX Voice auf vorhandene Audiodateien anwenden?
Das ist eine open source lib. Damit sollte das klappen. https://github.com/xiph/rnnoise/blob/master/examples/rnnoise_demo.c
- AI Audio Upscaling?
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What are some must-have Linux gaming utilities that you all know about? I just discovered mangohud and goverlay for getting live system resource stats in an overlay while I'm doing my Linux gaming, kind of like rivatuner on Windows... wish I discovered these sooner...
RNNoise (behaves similarly to RTX broadcast/voice/whatever the fuck they're calling it now, but with significantly better performance) - plugs into OBS or other programs flawlessly
- AMD leaks then removes announcement of AI noise-canceling function
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OBS β Open Broadcaster Software
OBS ships with rnnoise noise reduction, which is like NVIDIA Broadcast, but works on any CPU. See also NoiseTorch and EasyEffects if you're on Linux.
It's pretty great, works decently, but the sad thing is the author put it out a few years ago, wrote a paper and then moved onto something else and it's pretty much unmaintained and requires some very specific ML knowledge.
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Noise suppression on Ubuntu 22.04 running pipewire
I found this tool https://github.com/xiph/rnnoise and this guide that doesn't have ubuntu guide https://medium.com/@gamunu/linux-noise-cancellation-b9f997f6764d
- Recurrent neural network for audio noise reduction
Papercups
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Linen.dev β Building a chat app with Elixir and NextJS
The best language for the task at hand, when presented with time constraints, is the one that you already know well. OP said in the article that they authored Papercups [1]. Adopting Elixir for a websocket-push service makes a lot of sense, then. However, why don't you learn Elixir, some OTP, and then reconsider that question? You could be missing out.
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What Phoenix Elixir Tutorial do you want to see?
https://github.com/papercups-io/papercups - 5.2k stars, uses Phoenix 1.6
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Complete, Production-Ready Phoenix Reference Applications
Papercups
- Looking for recommendation of OS phoenix app to look at
- Example of an elixir CRUD app in production
- Show HN: Open-source live customer chat
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Lessons from answering 800 customer support queries in last 2 yrs as a founder
Shameless plug here if anyone is interested in an open source live chat tool check out https://github.com/papercups-io/papercups
- Create a conversation with Elixir with real code examples
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Ask HN: What novel tools are you using to write web sites/apps?
Phoneix - Elixir
We're a live message tool and it is basically what Elixir is built for https://github.com/papercups-io/papercups.
The Elixir community has been great and incredibly friendly. I originally was worried about the size of the community but that hasn't been an issue the community has been super helpful. I also think the annual stackoverflow usage surveys are very misleading because most of the community's questions get asked in ElixirForum and not on Stackoverflow.
Phoneix is the web framework of Elixir which is very similar to Rails but minus a lot of the magic has been very helpful for our productivity as well.
If I had to built another service that is websocket heavy I would definitely use Elixir. Even if it was a standard crud app I would still most likely choose Elixir.
- Papercups β open-source live customer chat in Elixir
What are some alternatives?
noise-suppression-for-voice - Noise suppression plugin based on Xiph's RNNoise
chatwoot - Open-source live-chat, email support, omni-channel desk. An alternative to Intercom, Zendesk, Salesforce Service Cloud etc. π₯π¬
NoiseTorch - Real-time microphone noise suppression on Linux.
SvelteKit - web development, streamlined
Oat++ - π±Light and powerful C++ web framework for highly scalable and resource-efficient web application. It's zero-dependency and easy-portable.
Gotify - A simple server for sending and receiving messages in real-time per WebSocket. (Includes a sleek web-ui)
Joplin - Joplin - the secure note taking and to-do app with synchronisation capabilities for Windows, macOS, Linux, Android and iOS.
LeapChat - Ephemeral, encrypted, in-browser chat rooms
slowbug - Slowbug is a VS Code extension for debugging your code in slow-mo!
LibreNews - A free and open breaking news notification platform
ctl - My variant of the C Template Library
PushBits - A simple server for push notifications via Matrix (and a minimalistic alternative to Pushover and Gotify) ππ―