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Remote Control Soundboard - Current Prototype
- 12 triggers, 1 to multiple samples per trigger
- Single or repeating samples, background mixing, no length limits
- Your own audio - WAV, MP3 or OGG formats, any bitrate, mono or stereo
- USB mass-storage file loading - no drivers, works with any computer.
An icon I did several years ago for a Windows application that worked with Ogg Vorbis. I don't remember the application name now.
The original looks better.
Avec son projet Open Media Commons, la société Sun Microsystems, déjà très active dans la communauté du logiciel libre, annonce OMS Video, un codec "open source gratuit". Basé sur le vieillot les codecs h.261 pour la vidéo et Vorbis pour l'audio, OMS se positionne comme une alternative sans redevance. Il y a cependant beaucoup de questions en suspend sur sa compétitivité par rapport au codec h.264 et sur la définition de sa licence open source. À suivre.
www.zewebvideo.mobi/2008/04/associated-press-lance-sa-pla...
I don't have CBC figured out. The "Find out why CBC.ca uses Windows Media Player" and "(optimized for Windows Media Player 9)" suggests that they use only that codec. But they don't. The Sonos system comes with a bunch of CBC streams via MP3, and the network goes out of its way to promote Ogg Vorbis, the only truly free and open codec out there. (MP3, while relatively open and widely used, is encumbered by patents.)
finally! and it sounds goooooood.
forresto.livejournal.com/158019.html
This collage is an example of what can be done totally legal and in a very simple way with the Creative Commons license. Thanks to the following individuals, Lawrence Lessig's Creative Commons and the Wikipedia.
The topics of this little experiment have been several. From the first days of computing to nowadays most recent thoughts about information and technology itself.
1. General history of computing, computer science and informatics
2. Warfare, WWII and the evolution of computers, security and surveillance
3. Globalisation and "the net"-culture
4. From industrial-society to information-society
5. Violability of the information-society
6. Privacy
7. Copyright vs. Copyleft
I'm attending informatics (which isn't cs only) at the Technical University of Vienna