Re: OT: Music player with substantial speakers than can play things like mp3, wav files from an SD card or USB pendrive

2021-06-18 Thread Dominic Knight
On Thu, 2021-06-17 at 19:50 -0400, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> I'd like to find a fairly large (I mean not a tiny hand held thing
> that uses
> batteries and has tiny controls) music player that can play things
> like mp3,
> wav and other music files from either an SD card or a USB pendrive.
>
> I'd prefer to be able to plug it in to a 120vac power source (ie.,
> not use
> batteries) and have at least one of:
>
>    * fairly large speakers for good sound
>    * output jack for headphones
>    * outputs that can connect to a "standard" audio amplifier /
> speaker setup
>
> I'd like to find something prebuilt, rather than making configuring
> something
> myself from anything like a Raspberry Pi.
>
> I'd like the controls to be on the order of the size (and style) of
> those on a
> "standard" stereo system.  (I mean, among other things, I don't want
> tiny
> controls, nor do I want to have to use a keyboard and monitor.)
>
> I've done a little bit of googling and searching on ebay without
> turning up
> anything.
>
> (There are things that would be nice to have, like if I'm playing
> music from
> an SD with 100 or more songs, it can remember where I left off when I
> turned it
> off and start from the next song when I power it on).
>
> Is anyone (on here) aware of something like that?
>
You could use a large buttoned bluetooth speaker (or one with Jack in)
connected to a USB music player that fits with all your other
requirements except button size, many are controllable from the
speakers end, this might be a different approach to the problem as you
then just have to find the music player that fits your other needs.

If your USB music player had jack out it could then be used for
headphones or a stereo systems input.

Agptek are one manufacturer of USB music players that comes to mind,
these normally support flac/mp3/wav amongst others.



Re: OT: Music player with substantial speakers than can play things like mp3, wav files from an SD card or USB pendrive

2021-06-18 Thread Dan Ritter
Anders Andersson wrote: 
> On Fri, Jun 18, 2021 at 1:51 AM  wrote:
> >
> > I'd like to find a fairly large (I mean not a tiny hand held thing that uses
> > batteries and has tiny controls) music player that can play things like mp3,
> > wav and other music files from either an SD card or a USB pendrive.
> > ...
> 
> This is WAY too off topic. You're not even asking for something that
> is related to computing, or free software. Hope someone will nip this
> in the bud before the debian mailing list archive ends up with a
> permanent advertisement for consumer hardware.

My device that does this runs Linux, and the front-end is an
open source project that is built and deployed with Debian.

There are two Debian packages that specifically support it.

So.

-dsr-



Re: OT: Music player with substantial speakers than can play things like mp3, wav files from an SD card or USB pendrive

2021-06-18 Thread Anders Andersson
On Fri, Jun 18, 2021 at 1:51 AM  wrote:
>
> I'd like to find a fairly large (I mean not a tiny hand held thing that uses
> batteries and has tiny controls) music player that can play things like mp3,
> wav and other music files from either an SD card or a USB pendrive.
> ...

This is WAY too off topic. You're not even asking for something that
is related to computing, or free software. Hope someone will nip this
in the bud before the debian mailing list archive ends up with a
permanent advertisement for consumer hardware.



Re: OT: Music player with substantial speakers than can play things like mp3, wav files from an SD card or USB pendrive

2021-06-18 Thread Dan Ritter
rhkra...@gmail.com wrote: 
> I'd like to find a fairly large (I mean not a tiny hand held thing that uses 
> batteries and has tiny controls) music player that can play things like mp3, 
> wav and other music files from either an SD card or a USB pendrive.
> 
> I'd prefer to be able to plug it in to a 120vac power source (ie., not use 
> batteries) and have at least one of:
> 
>* fairly large speakers for good sound
>* output jack for headphones
>* outputs that can connect to a "standard" audio amplifier / speaker setup
> 
> I'd like to find something prebuilt, rather than making configuring something 
> myself from anything like a Raspberry Pi.

Do you have a budget in mind?

A maximum size?

A requirement for a single piece?

An intended user with any special requirements?

-dsr-



Re: OT: Music player with substantial speakers than can play things like mp3, wav files from an SD card or USB pendrive

2021-06-18 Thread Andrei POPESCU
On Jo, 17 iun 21, 19:50:44, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> I'd like to find a fairly large (I mean not a tiny hand held thing that uses 
> batteries and has tiny controls) music player that can play things like mp3, 
> wav and other music files from either an SD card or a USB pendrive.
> 
> I'd prefer to be able to plug it in to a 120vac power source (ie., not use 
> batteries) and have at least one of:
> 
>* fairly large speakers for good sound
>* output jack for headphones
>* outputs that can connect to a "standard" audio amplifier / speaker setup

It seems you are looking for something like this:

https://www.amazon.de/Dynavox-Stereo-Kompakt-Verst%C3%A4rker-VT-80-schwarz/dp/B077YL23YC

(just an example, you're probably better off with something similar from 
more established brands)

> I'd like to find something prebuilt, rather than making configuring something 
> myself from anything like a Raspberry Pi.
> 
> I'd like the controls to be on the order of the size (and style) of those on 
> a 
> "standard" stereo system.  (I mean, among other things, I don't want tiny 
> controls, nor do I want to have to use a keyboard and monitor.)
> 
> I've done a little bit of googling and searching on ebay without turning up 
> anything.
> 
> (There are things that would be nice to have, like if I'm playing music from 
> an SD with 100 or more songs, it can remember where I left off when I turned 
> it 
> off and start from the next song when I power it on).
> 
> Is anyone (on here) aware of something like that?

The trouble with such pre-built systems (even the best ones) is that you 
are stuck with whatever it does (not) support.

E.g. according to the description of the device above it can play MP3, 
WAV (and WMA), but there is no mention of other interesting formats like 
FLAC or Opus.

Kind regards,
Andrei
-- 
http://wiki.debian.org/FAQsFromDebianUser


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Re: OT: Music player with substantial speakers than can play things like mp3, wav files from an SD card or USB pendrive

2021-06-18 Thread Andrew M.A. Cater
On Thu, Jun 17, 2021 at 07:50:44PM -0400, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> I'd like to find a fairly large (I mean not a tiny hand held thing that uses 
> batteries and has tiny controls) music player that can play things like mp3, 
> wav and other music files from either an SD card or a USB pendrive.
> 
> I'd prefer to be able to plug it in to a 120vac power source (ie., not use 
> batteries) and have at least one of:
> 
>* fairly large speakers for good sound
>* output jack for headphones
>* outputs that can connect to a "standard" audio amplifier / speaker setup
> 
> I'd like to find something prebuilt, rather than making configuring something 
> myself from anything like a Raspberry Pi.
> 
> I'd like the controls to be on the order of the size (and style) of those on 
> a 
> "standard" stereo system.  (I mean, among other things, I don't want tiny 
> controls, nor do I want to have to use a keyboard and monitor.)
> 
> I've done a little bit of googling and searching on ebay without turning up 
> anything.
> 
> (There are things that would be nice to have, like if I'm playing music from 
> an SD with 100 or more songs, it can remember where I left off when I turned 
> it 
> off and start from the next song when I power it on).
> 
> Is anyone (on here) aware of something like that?
> 

Roberts internet radio probably has much of what you need and they do sound 
systems. Likewise systems form Pure
or if you've got some money, systems from Ruark 

All the best

Andy C.



Re: OT: Music player with substantial speakers than can play things like mp3, wav files from an SD card or USB pendrive

2021-06-17 Thread deloptes
rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:

> I'd like to find a fairly large (I mean not a tiny hand held thing that
> uses batteries and has tiny controls) music player that can play things
> like mp3, wav and other music files from either an SD card or a USB
> pendrive.
> 
> I'd prefer to be able to plug it in to a 120vac power source (ie., not use
> batteries) and have at least one of:
> 
>* fairly large speakers for good sound
>* output jack for headphones
>* outputs that can connect to a "standard" audio amplifier / speaker
>setup
> 
> I'd like to find something prebuilt, rather than making configuring
> something myself from anything like a Raspberry Pi.
> 
> I'd like the controls to be on the order of the size (and style) of those
> on a
> "standard" stereo system.  (I mean, among other things, I don't want tiny
> controls, nor do I want to have to use a keyboard and monitor.)
> 
> I've done a little bit of googling and searching on ebay without turning
> up anything.
> 
> (There are things that would be nice to have, like if I'm playing music
> from an SD with 100 or more songs, it can remember where I left off when I
> turned it off and start from the next song when I power it on).
> 
> Is anyone (on here) aware of something like that?

I was envisioning something like this
https://www.amazon.com/Bluetooth-Speakers-Portable-Subwoofer-Colorful/dp/B07ZKWG5HL/ref=sr_1_50?dchild=1=Portable+Sound+System=1623992086=8-50





Re: OT: Music player with substantial speakers than can play things like mp3, wav files from an SD card or USB pendrive

2021-06-17 Thread Russell L. Harris

On Thu, Jun 17, 2021 at 07:50:44PM -0400, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:

I'd like to find a fairly large (I mean not a tiny hand held thing that uses
batteries and has tiny controls) music player that can play things like mp3,
wav and other music files from either an SD card or a USB pendrive.


I recommend a TASCAM recorder or a TASCAM CD player (CD200-SB has SD
and USB inputs).



I'd prefer to be able to plug it in to a 120vac power source (ie., not use
batteries) and have at least one of:



  * fairly large speakers for good sound


Use powered monitors; Presonus Eris E3.5 work well ($100/pair from
Sweetwater).


  * output jack for headphones


Built-in on TASCAM units.  


  * outputs that can connect to a "standard" audio amplifier / speaker setup


Spend the additional money (very little) for balanced output (two
wires plus ground), to have the ability to make a hum-free connection
to other balanced gear.  Balanced gear can also connect to unbalanced
(RCA) gear.  Balanced gear uses a XLR connector or a 3-conductor 1/4
inch phone plug for each channel.



(There are things that would be nice to have, like if I'm playing music from
an SD with 100 or more songs, it can remember where I left off when I turned it
off and start from the next song when I power it on).


Standard on the above.

RLH



OT: Music player with substantial speakers than can play things like mp3, wav files from an SD card or USB pendrive

2021-06-17 Thread rhkramer
I'd like to find a fairly large (I mean not a tiny hand held thing that uses 
batteries and has tiny controls) music player that can play things like mp3, 
wav and other music files from either an SD card or a USB pendrive.

I'd prefer to be able to plug it in to a 120vac power source (ie., not use 
batteries) and have at least one of:

   * fairly large speakers for good sound
   * output jack for headphones
   * outputs that can connect to a "standard" audio amplifier / speaker setup

I'd like to find something prebuilt, rather than making configuring something 
myself from anything like a Raspberry Pi.

I'd like the controls to be on the order of the size (and style) of those on a 
"standard" stereo system.  (I mean, among other things, I don't want tiny 
controls, nor do I want to have to use a keyboard and monitor.)

I've done a little bit of googling and searching on ebay without turning up 
anything.

(There are things that would be nice to have, like if I'm playing music from 
an SD with 100 or more songs, it can remember where I left off when I turned it 
off and start from the next song when I power it on).

Is anyone (on here) aware of something like that?



Re: how to record sound to mp3 [wav, for those who can]

2021-03-26 Thread David Wright
On Thu 25 Mar 2021 at 23:22:35 (+0100), Nicolas George wrote:
> David Wright (12021-03-25):
> > > > $ arecord -d 10 -f cd -v -v -v -D plughw:0,0 /tmp/audiofile.wav
> > > This command does not record the sound being played.
> > … on your machine.
> 
> On no machine, unless specifically configured, which is not trivial at
> all.

I'm afraid it's my PCs that are making a liar of you.

> It would be helpful if people around here learned to read carefully the
> questions before trying to answer them. If they did, they would have
> noticed that the question was not to record the ambient sound but the
> sound BEING PLAYED.

What, you think that I left the speakers running so that the
microphone could record them?

Or did you think that the sound of Thursday evening traffic in
St John's Wood would carry across six timezones?

Or you think that's it's impossible that I should have been able to
record sound the computer is playing (from whatever source, external
or internal) on an OOTB PC for over twenty years?

Is that why you're shouting?

Anyway, back to talking about PCs.

> To achieve it requires either a hardware connection
> between the output and the input of the sound controller

That's my understanding. Using the terminology of the High Definition
Audio Specification (Revision 1.0a June 17, 2010), there is presumably
a link from the § 7.2.3.4 Mixer (Summing Amp) Widget output to the
§ 7.2.3.5 Selector (Multiplexer) Widget. This link in inside the
Widget Interconnection "Cloud" of Figure 49, Module-Based Codec
Architecture.

"The exact number of possible inputs to each widget is determined by
design;" (§ 7.1.1), which is why you can't just conjure up any facility
on any PC.

But the machine is no more "specifically" configured than any PC which
has HDA and a mobo: the vendor (Intel on my old one, Dell on the new)
decides how much of the architecture they will implement. And the
modern way seems to be to go cheap, particularly with consumer-grade.
OK, this one's a decent machine, but it's still a 10-yr old cast off.

Perhaps take a look at the specification and see how much is left open
to the vendor. Hence the need for scripts like alsa-info to tell you
exactly what you've bought with any given "sound card".

This PC was not cheap when it was bought, largely because it's
supposed to be fast: it was bought for students to run geophysics
programs on. You can now pick them up for just over $100. If I ever
have to hand it back, I might just do that. It'll be the first
computer I've ever bought.

> or the
> collaboration of the sound driver.

I assume by this that you're talking about pulseaudio. That's why
I've mentioned it each and every time. (This is the third—should
I put it in my signature?) I can't advise how the OP might use it,
because *I* don't¹. But perhaps that's not expected here—one just
replies   "pulseaudio"   like the people saying   "audacity"
or   "sox"   or whatever.

Finally, who's the audio expert round here? I posted what I think
is a determining factor for just vanilla ALSA and the card to work
with my command line. Presumably there's a definitive answer to
this? Do *you* have it?

¹ self-imposed simplicity: no PA, no OSS.

Cheers,
David.



Re: how to record sound to mp3 [wav, for those who can]

2021-03-26 Thread Michael Lange
On Fri, 26 Mar 2021 09:47:28 +0100
Michael Lange  wrote:

> Plus, I don't know how to switch the OSS capture
> device programmatically (if this is important for the OP's purpose).

uh, got it.

$ aumix -v R

sets "Vol" as capture device.

Regards
Michael

.-.. .. ...- .   .-.. --- -. --.   .- -. -..   .--. .-. --- ... .--. . .-.

A man either lives life as it happens to him, meets it head-on and
licks it, or he turns his back on it and starts to wither away.
-- Dr. Boyce, "The Menagerie" ("The Cage"), stardate
unknown



Re: how to record sound to mp3 [wav, for those who can]

2021-03-26 Thread Michael Lange
Hi,

On Fri, 26 Mar 2021 08:38:02 +0100
 wrote:

> On Thu, Mar 25, 2021 at 11:22:35PM +0100, Nicolas George wrote:
> > David Wright (12021-03-25):
> > > > > $ arecord -d 10 -f cd -v -v -v -D plughw:0,0 /tmp/audiofile.wav
> > > > This command does not record the sound being played.
> > > … on your machine.
> > 
> > On no machine, unless specifically configured, which is not trivial at
> > all.
> 
> No idea about pulse. For ALSA, there's alsaloop, which comes with a
> man page. Part of alsa-utils. No need of playing with cable loops.

another possibility: when the snd-mixer-oss module is loaded, (at least
here) when using the OSS mixer device there is a "Vol" control which
roughly appears to be the OSS equivalent to Alsa's "Master" control,
however the "Vol" control has an additional "Capture" switch. Now, when I
set "Vol" as capture device, the audio output will be used as input for
recording. Recording level can be adjusted with the "PCM" mixer control.
Of course, the presence of this "Vol" control may depend on the sound
card / driver in use.
Oddly, there seems to be no such easy way to achieve the same result with
alsamixer/amixer. Plus, I don't know how to switch the OSS capture device
programmatically (if this is important for the OP's purpose).

Regards
Michael

.-.. .. ...- .   .-.. --- -. --.   .- -. -..   .--. .-. --- ... .--. . .-.

I thought my people would grow tired of killing.  But you were right,
they see it is easier than trading.  And it has its pleasures.  I feel
it myself.  Like the hunt, but with richer rewards.
-- Apella, "A Private Little War", stardate 4211.8



Re: how to record sound to mp3 [wav, for those who can]

2021-03-26 Thread tomas
On Thu, Mar 25, 2021 at 11:22:35PM +0100, Nicolas George wrote:
> David Wright (12021-03-25):
> > > > $ arecord -d 10 -f cd -v -v -v -D plughw:0,0 /tmp/audiofile.wav
> > > This command does not record the sound being played.
> > … on your machine.
> 
> On no machine, unless specifically configured, which is not trivial at
> all.

No idea about pulse. For ALSA, there's alsaloop, which comes with a
man page. Part of alsa-utils. No need of playing with cable loops.

> It would be helpful if people around here learned to read carefully the
> questions before trying to answer them [...]

(I was on the verge of making a snarky comment to that, but I'll bite
my tongue).

Cheers
 - t


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Re: how to record sound to mp3 [wav, for those who can]

2021-03-25 Thread Linux-Fan

David Wright writes:


On Thu 25 Mar 2021 at 17:40:51 (+0100), Nicolas George wrote:
> David Wright (12021-03-25):


[...]


> > To record, you could type, for example, in another xterm:
> >
> > $ arecord -d 10 -f cd -v -v -v -D plughw:0,0 /tmp/audiofile.wav
>
> This command does not record the sound being played.

… on your machine. That's why I wrote "If you can't get ALSA to work…".
You're a candidate for pulseaudio, I assume.


Not sure about that command above (no means to try it just now), but _with_  
PulseAudio, I can record the sound that is being played back just fine by  
means of "monitor" audio devices. E.g. I have the following command to  
record my screen (`0:v`), the "monitor" device (`1:a`) and a microphone  
(`2:a`):


exec ffmpeg -video_size 1600x1200 -framerate 12 -f x11grab -i :0.0+0,0 -f pulse -ac 2 -i 
0 -f pulse -i 1 -c:v libvpx-vp9 -deadline realtime -b:v 2M -c:a libvorbis -map 0:v -map 
1:a -map 2:a "recording.webm"

adapted from these two sources:

-> https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/Capture/Desktop
-> 
https://askubuntu.com/questions/682144/capturing-only-desktop-audio-with-ffmpeg

It may of course be true that the hardware _does_ support/accellerate this  
monitoring capability, but it does not seem to be entirely uncommon a  
feature? Here, it even works inside virtual machines :)


Btw. the existence of monitor devices can be checked in `pavucontrol` where  
under "Output" it lists two monitor devices here: One for the HDMI output  
and one for the "Built-in Analog Stereo" Output.



AFAICT, this recording facility is getting harder to find on most
computers, if you're not prepared to fork out for a sound card.
I've been fortunate, in that just as my ancient Pentium III expired,
I have acquired a Dell Precision T3500 which has a well endowed
(integrated) sound card.

I'm still finding my way round it: for example, it also has HDMI
playback, but I haven't yet worked out how to exploit it. The machine
has one DVI output and two DisplayPorts, so I need to find a
DisplayPort/HDMI adapter to see if that would yield anything.


[...]

As far as I can tell, DisplayPort can transport audio without the need for  
an HDMI adapter. Here, a Radeon Pro W5500 graphics card is connected to a  
Dell U2713HM display which has one HDMI, DP, VGA and DVI input each. The  
W5500 is connected to the DisplayPort and if I play sound to the "HDMI"  
output, the display outputs that sound through its headphones socket.


Similar to your case, there are no HDMI ports on the graphics card.
In my case, it is only DisplayPorts.

HTH
Linux-Fan

öö


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Re: how to record sound to mp3 [wav, for those who can]

2021-03-25 Thread Nicolas George
David Wright (12021-03-25):
> > > $ arecord -d 10 -f cd -v -v -v -D plughw:0,0 /tmp/audiofile.wav
> > This command does not record the sound being played.
> … on your machine.

On no machine, unless specifically configured, which is not trivial at
all.

It would be helpful if people around here learned to read carefully the
questions before trying to answer them. If they did, they would have
noticed that the question was not to record the ambient sound but the
sound BEING PLAYED. To achieve it requires either a hardware connection
between the output and the input of the sound controller or the
collaboration of the sound driver.

Regards,

-- 
  Nicolas George


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Re: how to record sound to mp3 [wav, for those who can]

2021-03-25 Thread David Wright
On Thu 25 Mar 2021 at 17:40:51 (+0100), Nicolas George wrote:
> David Wright (12021-03-25):
> > > now i modify my requirement to how to use arecord to record sound being 
> > > played to wav file
> 
> > To record, you could type, for example, in another xterm:
> > 
> > $ arecord -d 10 -f cd -v -v -v -D plughw:0,0 /tmp/audiofile.wav
> 
> This command does not record the sound being played.

… on your machine. That's why I wrote "If you can't get ALSA to work…".
You're a candidate for pulseaudio, I assume.

AFAICT, this recording facility is getting harder to find on most
computers, if you're not prepared to fork out for a sound card.
I've been fortunate, in that just as my ancient Pentium III expired,
I have acquired a Dell Precision T3500 which has a well endowed
(integrated) sound card.

I'm still finding my way round it: for example, it also has HDMI
playback, but I haven't yet worked out how to exploit it. The machine
has one DVI output and two DisplayPorts, so I need to find a
DisplayPort/HDMI adapter to see if that would yield anything.

It also has two Capture devices, and I don't know whether that means
there are two independent sound paths. If so, then I should be able to
record from the browser to one file, and from a TV (my UK one has
headphone output) or the Roku remote control to another file at the
same time.

Anyway, I just recorded a bit of audio from Abbey Road (the live webcam¹,
not the album), and printed the settings of all the controls (attached).
AIUI at present, the critical section is at the end, specifically:

Simple mixer control 'Input Source',0
  Capabilities: cenum
  Items: 'Mic' 'Line' 'Stereo Mix'
  Item0: 'Stereo Mix'

IOW, I'm recording from the mixer.

¹ https://www.abbeyroad.com/Crossing

Cheers,
David.
Simple mixer control 'Master',0
  Capabilities: pvolume pvolume-joined pswitch pswitch-joined
  Playback channels: Mono
  Limits: Playback 0 - 31
  Mono: Playback 31 [100%] [0.00dB] [on]
Simple mixer control 'Headphone',0
  Capabilities: pvolume pswitch
  Playback channels: Front Left - Front Right
  Limits: Playback 0 - 39
  Mono:
  Front Left: Playback 0 [0%] [-58.50dB] [on]
  Front Right: Playback 0 [0%] [-58.50dB] [on]
Simple mixer control 'Speaker',0
  Capabilities: pvolume pvolume-joined pswitch pswitch-joined
  Playback channels: Mono
  Limits: Playback 0 - 31
  Mono: Playback 0 [0%] [-46.50dB] [on]
Simple mixer control 'Line',0
  Capabilities: pvolume pswitch
  Playback channels: Front Left - Front Right
  Limits: Playback 0 - 31
  Mono:
  Front Left: Playback 0 [0%] [-34.50dB] [on]
  Front Right: Playback 0 [0%] [-34.50dB] [on]
Simple mixer control 'Line Boost',0
  Capabilities: volume
  Playback channels: Front Left - Front Right
  Capture channels: Front Left - Front Right
  Limits: 0 - 3
  Front Left: 0 [0%] [0.00dB]
  Front Right: 0 [0%] [0.00dB]
Simple mixer control 'Line Out',0
  Capabilities: pvolume pswitch
  Playback channels: Front Left - Front Right
  Limits: Playback 0 - 31
  Mono:
  Front Left: Playback 0 [0%] [-46.50dB] [on]
  Front Right: Playback 0 [0%] [-46.50dB] [on]
Simple mixer control 'Mic',0
  Capabilities: pvolume pswitch
  Playback channels: Front Left - Front Right
  Limits: Playback 0 - 31
  Mono:
  Front Left: Playback 0 [0%] [-34.50dB] [off]
  Front Right: Playback 0 [0%] [-34.50dB] [off]
Simple mixer control 'Mic Boost',0
  Capabilities: volume
  Playback channels: Front Left - Front Right
  Capture channels: Front Left - Front Right
  Limits: 0 - 3
  Front Left: 0 [0%] [0.00dB]
  Front Right: 0 [0%] [0.00dB]
Simple mixer control 'Beep',0
  Capabilities: pvolume pvolume-joined pswitch pswitch-joined
  Playback channels: Mono
  Limits: Playback 0 - 15
  Mono: Playback 0 [0%] [-45.00dB] [off]
Simple mixer control 'Auto-Mute Mode',0
  Capabilities: enum
  Items: 'Disabled' 'Speaker Only' 'Line Out+Speaker'
  Item0: 'Disabled'
Simple mixer control 'Independent HP',0
  Capabilities: enum
  Items: 'Disabled' 'Enabled'
  Item0: 'Disabled'
Simple mixer control 'Loopback Mixing',0
  Capabilities: enum
  Items: 'Disabled' 'Enabled'
  Item0: 'Disabled'
Simple mixer control 'Capture',0
  Capabilities: cvolume cswitch
  Capture channels: Front Left - Front Right
  Limits: Capture 0 - 54
  Front Left: Capture 44 [81%] [7.50dB] [on]
  Front Right: Capture 44 [81%] [7.50dB] [on]
Simple mixer control 'Capture',1
  Capabilities: cvolume cswitch
  Capture channels: Front Left - Front Right
  Limits: Capture 0 - 54
  Front Left: Capture 33 [61%] [-9.00dB] [on]
  Front Right: Capture 33 [61%] [-9.00dB] [on]
Simple mixer control 'Input Source',0
  Capabilities: cenum
  Items: 'Mic' 'Line' 'Stereo Mix'
  Item0: 'Stereo Mix'
Simple mixer control 'Input Source',1
  Capabilities: cenum
  Items: 'Mic' 'Line' 'Stereo Mix'
  Item0: 'Line'


Re: mp3 - wav + bränning

2005-10-20 Thread kringla

Vart placerar du skripten i filsystemet?
Fick lite problem med att maketoc inte hittades

On Sat, 17 Sep 2005 16:31:13 +0200 (CEST)
Henning Ask [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 On Sat, September 17, 2005 10:53, kringla said:
  Jag funderade på hur ni gör för att skapa audio-cd skivor med musik från
 mp3 filer?
  Finns det något käckt program för detta?
 
 
 oops...skickade visst fel, här kommer det till listan också
 
 jag använder mig av mpg321, normalize-audio o cdrdao
 skickar med ett script som jag använder...
 det gör om alla mp3-filer i katalogen man står i till wav, och bränner dom
 (i bokstavsordning)
 
 #!/bin/bash
 
 #convert white space to _
 for i in *.mp3;
 do mv $i `echo $i | tr ' ' '_'`;
 done;
 
 #convert to wav
 for i in *.mp3;
 do mpg321 -w `basename $i .mp3`.wav $i;
 done;
 
 maketoc;
 
 /usr/bin/normalize-audio -m *.wav;
 
 /usr/bin/cdrdao write --device ATA:1,0,0 --speed 2 cd.toc;
 
 rm *.wav
 
 maketoc är ett perlscript som gör en table-of-contents-fil i katalogen man
 står i (cd.toc, den används av cdrdao):
 
 #!/usr/bin/perl -w
 
 use strict;
 
 opendir DH, . or die Cannot open .;
 open TOC,  cd.toc;
 
 print TOC CD_DA;
 
 foreach (sort readdir DH){
   if(/[\S]*\.wav/){
 print TOC \n\nTRACK AUDIO\n;
 print TOC AUDIOFILE \$_\ 0;
   }
 }
 
 går säkert att göra kortare o snyggare men det funkar iaf:)
 
 /henning
 
 
 
 
 
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Re: mp3 - wav + bränning

2005-10-20 Thread Daniel Nylander
On Sat, September 17, 2005 10:53, kringla said:

Jag funderade på hur ni gör för att skapa audio-cd skivor med musik från
  

Kan inte GnomeBaker göra detta?

Mvh
Daniel
begin:vcard
fn:Daniel Nylander
n:Nylander;Daniel
adr:;;;Stockholm;;;Sweden
email;internet:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
title:Senior IT Security Specialist
x-mozilla-html:TRUE
url:http://www.DanielNylander.se/
version:2.1
end:vcard



smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature


Re: mp3 - wav + bränning

2005-10-20 Thread kringla


mp3cd - Perl script to burn audio CDs from lists of MP3s/WAVs/OGGs/FLACs
Har inte provat ännu men det låter ok.

Dock har jag provat shellscripten från den här diskutionstråden.
Har gjort 3 cd-skivor nu och det fungerar SÅ BRA!


On Thu, 20 Oct 2005 23:09:03 +0200
Daniel Nylander [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 On Sat, September 17, 2005 10:53, kringla said:
 
 Jag funderade på hur ni gör för att skapa audio-cd skivor med musik från
   
 
 Kan inte GnomeBaker göra detta?
 
 Mvh
 Daniel



Re: mp3 - wav + bränning

2005-10-20 Thread Henning Ask
On Thu, October 20, 2005 22:46, kringla said:

 Vart placerar du skripten i filsystemet?
 Fick lite problem med att maketoc inte hittades


Lägg dom någonstans som i din PATH, eller ange absolut sökväg i scripten
så borde det funka
/henning


 On Sat, 17 Sep 2005 16:31:13 +0200 (CEST)
 Henning Ask [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 On Sat, September 17, 2005 10:53, kringla said:
  Jag funderade på hur ni gör för att skapa audio-cd skivor med musik
 från
 mp3 filer?
  Finns det något käckt program för detta?
 
 
 oops...skickade visst fel, här kommer det till listan också

 jag använder mig av mpg321, normalize-audio o cdrdao
 skickar med ett script som jag använder...
 det gör om alla mp3-filer i katalogen man står i till wav, och bränner
 dom
 (i bokstavsordning)

 #!/bin/bash

 #convert white space to _
 for i in *.mp3;
 do mv $i `echo $i | tr ' ' '_'`;
 done;

 #convert to wav
 for i in *.mp3;
 do mpg321 -w `basename $i .mp3`.wav $i;
 done;

 maketoc;

 /usr/bin/normalize-audio -m *.wav;

 /usr/bin/cdrdao write --device ATA:1,0,0 --speed 2 cd.toc;

 rm *.wav

 maketoc är ett perlscript som gör en table-of-contents-fil i katalogen
 man
 står i (cd.toc, den används av cdrdao):

 #!/usr/bin/perl -w

 use strict;

 opendir DH, . or die Cannot open .;
 open TOC,  cd.toc;

 print TOC CD_DA;

 foreach (sort readdir DH){
   if(/[\S]*\.wav/){
 print TOC \n\nTRACK AUDIO\n;
 print TOC AUDIOFILE \$_\ 0;
   }
 }

 går säkert att göra kortare o snyggare men det funkar iaf:)

 /henning





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Re: mp3 - wav + bränning

2005-09-18 Thread Per Eric Rosén
gnomebaker ser ut att klara det också, på ett väldigt GUIntiutivt sätt med
dra och släpp och hela Gnome-baletten, om det är det du kör.

/Per Eric
--
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mp3 - wav + bränning

2005-09-17 Thread kringla
Jag funderade på hur ni gör för att skapa audio-cd skivor med musik från mp3 
filer?
Finns det något käckt program för detta?



Re: mp3 - wav + bränning

2005-09-17 Thread Torbjörn Svensson
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

kringla wrote:
 Jag funderade på hur ni gör för att skapa audio-cd skivor med musik från mp3 
 filer?
 Finns det något käckt program för detta?

Du kan ju alltid ta en titt på mpg321 och cdrecord, de borde hjälpa dig
en bra bit på vägen. Om du helre vill jobba med gui så tror jag k3b
klarar av det.

- --
  .''`. Torbjörn Svensson, azoff (at) se (dot) linux (dot) org
 : :' : 7EB9 2DC5 61AE DAB5 7099  BAC6 798E E39A DBDB 0CFD
 `. `'  http://azoff.homeip.net | http://azoff.tty0.org
   `--  http://se.linux.org

-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v1.4.1 (GNU/Linux)
Comment: Using GnuPG with Thunderbird - http://enigmail.mozdev.org

iD8DBQFDK+QJeY7jmtvbDP0RAmmtAKCmIUMYi15Q5UGC9QbyyHD0Q9SNmgCeNYVn
lAeceTKOsH1xysb/KrZKDxg=
=adWw
-END PGP SIGNATURE-


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Re: mp3 - wav + bränning

2005-09-17 Thread kringla

Ah, k3b då måste jag ha en massa KDE grejor och min burk är KDE-fri zon.
NeroLinux klarar inte att bränna mp3-audio on the fly, den funktionen finns 
i winXXX varianten av programmet, men inte för Linux.

Hittade ett shellscript när jag googlade, men det fungerar inte alls.


On Sat, 17 Sep 2005 11:38:19 +0200
Torbjörn Svensson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
 Hash: SHA1
 
 kringla wrote:
  Jag funderade på hur ni gör för att skapa audio-cd skivor med musik från 
  mp3 filer?
  Finns det något käckt program för detta?
 
 Du kan ju alltid ta en titt på mpg321 och cdrecord, de borde hjälpa dig
 en bra bit på vägen. Om du helre vill jobba med gui så tror jag k3b
 klarar av det.
 
 - --
   .''`. Torbjörn Svensson, azoff (at) se (dot) linux (dot) org
  : :' : 7EB9 2DC5 61AE DAB5 7099  BAC6 798E E39A DBDB 0CFD
  `. `'  http://azoff.homeip.net | http://azoff.tty0.org
`--  http://se.linux.org
 
 -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
 Version: GnuPG v1.4.1 (GNU/Linux)
 Comment: Using GnuPG with Thunderbird - http://enigmail.mozdev.org
 
 iD8DBQFDK+QJeY7jmtvbDP0RAmmtAKCmIUMYi15Q5UGC9QbyyHD0Q9SNmgCeNYVn
 lAeceTKOsH1xysb/KrZKDxg=
 =adWw
 -END PGP SIGNATURE-
 
 
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Re: mp3 - wav + bränning

2005-09-17 Thread Sven Arvidsson
kringla wrote:
 Hittade ett shellscript när jag googlade, men det fungerar inte alls.

mp3burn kanske är något för dig?

Description: burn audio CDs directly from MP3, Ogg Vorbis, or FLAC
files
 mp3burn is a Perl script that allows you to burn audio CDs composed
 of MP3, Ogg Vorbis, or FLAC tracks without an intermediate file
 conversion
 to .cdr or .wav.

-- 
Cheers,
Sven Arvidsson
http://www.whiz.se
PGP Key ID 760BDD22


signature.asc
Description: Digital signature


Re: mp3 - wav + bränning

2005-09-17 Thread Henning Ask
On Sat, September 17, 2005 10:53, kringla said:
 Jag funderade på hur ni gör för att skapa audio-cd skivor med musik från
mp3 filer?
 Finns det något käckt program för detta?


oops...skickade visst fel, här kommer det till listan också

jag använder mig av mpg321, normalize-audio o cdrdao
skickar med ett script som jag använder...
det gör om alla mp3-filer i katalogen man står i till wav, och bränner dom
(i bokstavsordning)

#!/bin/bash

#convert white space to _
for i in *.mp3;
do mv $i `echo $i | tr ' ' '_'`;
done;

#convert to wav
for i in *.mp3;
do mpg321 -w `basename $i .mp3`.wav $i;
done;

maketoc;

/usr/bin/normalize-audio -m *.wav;

/usr/bin/cdrdao write --device ATA:1,0,0 --speed 2 cd.toc;

rm *.wav

maketoc är ett perlscript som gör en table-of-contents-fil i katalogen man
står i (cd.toc, den används av cdrdao):

#!/usr/bin/perl -w

use strict;

opendir DH, . or die Cannot open .;
open TOC,  cd.toc;

print TOC CD_DA;

foreach (sort readdir DH){
  if(/[\S]*\.wav/){
print TOC \n\nTRACK AUDIO\n;
print TOC AUDIOFILE \$_\ 0;
  }
}

går säkert att göra kortare o snyggare men det funkar iaf:)

/henning





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mp3 - wav

2004-10-29 Thread kringla
Finns det något bra program som man kan använda för att konvertera 
mp3-filer till wav. Gärna med ogg stöd också men inte nödvändigt.


Jag ska bara göra säkerhetskopior av mina vinylskivor jag gjort mp3 av.  ;)



Re: mp3 - wav

2004-10-29 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Detta bör fungera för att konvertera mp3 till wav:

mpg123 -q --wav - filnamn.mp3  filnamn.wav


--
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[EMAIL PROTECTED] - +46 70 9980304

---BeginMessage---
Finns det något bra program som man kan använda för att konvertera 
mp3-filer till wav. Gärna med ogg stöd också men inte nödvändigt.


Jag ska bara göra säkerhetskopior av mina vinylskivor jag gjort mp3 av.  ;)


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Re: mp3 - wav

2004-10-29 Thread Pelle Nilsson
kringla skrev (2004-10-29, 16:14 +0200):
 Finns det något bra program som man kan använda för att konvertera 
 mp3-filer till wav. Gärna med ogg stöd också men inte nödvändigt.

Om du använder XMMS så är det bara att använda output-pluginet för
diskskrivning, på så sätt kan du konvertera nästan alla ljudformat
till wav.


-- 
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Älvängsvägen 3
172 37 Sundbyberg
08-764 59 58
073-63 800 80



Re: creating audio-cd image from mp3/wav

2004-08-02 Thread Micha Feigin
On Sun, Aug 01, 2004 at 12:07:59PM -0500, Brad Sims wrote:
 On Saturday 31 July 2004 8:04 am, Micha Feigin wrote:
  Does it create a raw image for you for an audio project ? (could be that
  I missed something or that it was a buggy version).
 
 I sit corrected... when I tell it to make an image it just gives
 me the wavs as well :/ I guess that's what I get for not trying it first.
 
 I /does/ do the right thing on data cds though...
 

I know that, its probably because k3b, just like at least most if not
all other cd burning software, uses mkisofs to create the image for data
cd, which can either write the image to hard-disk or pipe it on directly
to the cd recording programs. For audio cds it uses cdrdao or cdrecord
which can only write the data directly to cdrom from .wav, .au or raw
files (no header).

I guess there is no way around implementing this on my own (either
fully or hacking into cdrecord).

 -- 
 I've noticed that anti-Microsoft folks fall into three basic camps with respect
 to their desired remedies.  One kind wants to split the company up but not
 impose behavioral restrictions. The second kind wants to impose behavioral 
 restrictions but leave the company otherwise intact.  The third kind wants a 
 wants a nuclear strike on Redmond. -- Kyle Haight in ATR
 
 
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Re: creating audio-cd image from mp3/wav

2004-08-01 Thread Brad Sims
On Saturday 31 July 2004 8:04 am, Micha Feigin wrote:
 Does it create a raw image for you for an audio project ? (could be that
 I missed something or that it was a buggy version).

I sit corrected... when I tell it to make an image it just gives
me the wavs as well :/ I guess that's what I get for not trying it first.

I /does/ do the right thing on data cds though...

-- 
I've noticed that anti-Microsoft folks fall into three basic camps with respect
to their desired remedies.  One kind wants to split the company up but not
impose behavioral restrictions. The second kind wants to impose behavioral 
restrictions but leave the company otherwise intact.  The third kind wants a 
wants a nuclear strike on Redmond. -- Kyle Haight in ATR


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Re: creating audio-cd image from mp3/wav

2004-07-31 Thread Micha Feigin
On Fri, Jul 30, 2004 at 11:04:52PM -0500, Brad Sims wrote:
 On Friday 30 July 2004 6:07 pm, csj wrote:
 
  Since cdrecord can burn cd-compatible wav files on the fly, why
  not just create the wav files in one directory, making sure the
  files are arranged in track order, say track01.wav, track02.wav?
  If you need special options like cd text put it in a script, so
  you can simply type something like my_audio_burn.sh
  ./Track_Directory/*wav.
 
 Or you can simply use K3B it will both create a iso from
 mp3s and burn isos. 
 I wish that program was ported to windows... its that damn good.
 

I tried it. I created a new audio cd project, gave it a bunch of mp3
files and told it to only create an image. It worked very hard and then
just left behind a bunch of wav files but no image. Tried the same with
wav files and it just left behind a bunch of wav files with a different
name ?!?

Does it create a raw image for you for an audio project ? (could be that
I missed something or that it was a buggy version).

 -- 
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Re: creating audio-cd image from mp3/wav

2004-07-31 Thread Micha Feigin
On Fri, Jul 30, 2004 at 07:09:45PM -0500, Nate Bargmann wrote:
 * Micha Feigin [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2004 Jul 30 18:42 -0500]:
  I never intend for the files to go to the cdrom, otherwise the solution
  would be easy. I want to create an image I can mount in vmware so that
  windows will think its a regular audio cd so that I can download it to
  my mini disk using Sony simple burner, thus bypassing Sony jukebox which
  does havoc and I really don't like anyway since it lets you download
  each file only three times to mini disk, and you can't delete it from
  the mini disk directly, you have to do it through the sony jukebox
  (even if the file is yours, or you own the cd).
  
  Now if only the libnetmd people finally figure out how to record to a
  netmd mini disk directly from Linux, or Sony stopped being so paranoid
  and windows centric, life would be a lot easier ;-)
 
 Have you tried mkisofs?  I haven't played with it myself, but I think
 that is what X-CD-Roast uses to create an image in the Master mode.
 

Read through the whole man page and some other stuff also. Audio cds
don't have a file system, so they are not iso9660 cds. They basically
only have the raw data stream in 16-bit stereo samples in PCM coding at
44100 samples/second with no header. I don't know the endianess
though. They also need to have an integral number of blocks in length.

I guess the solution will have to be to use sox to create the raw files
and then write my own program to create the image or hack into cdrecord
to enable it to dump its data to file skipping the drive commands.

 From the man page:
 
 MKISOFS(8)  MKISOFS(8)
 
 NAME
mkisofs  - create an hybrid ISO9660/JOLIET/HFS filesystem with optional
Rock Ridge attributes.
 
 SYNOPSIS
mkisofs [ options ] [ -o filename ] pathspec [pathspec ...]
 
 DESCRIPTION
mkisofs  is  effectively  a  pre-mastering  program  to   generate   an
ISO9660/JOLIET/HFS hybrid filesystem.
 
mkisofs  is  capable  of  generating  the  System  Use Sharing Protocol
records (SUSP) specified by the Rock Ridge Interchange Protocol.   This
is  used  to  further describe the files in the iso9660 filesystem to a
unix host, and provides information such as longer filenames,  uid/gid,
posix permissions, symbolic links, block and character devices.
 
 .
 .
 .
 
 - Nate 
 
 -- 
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   Amateur radio exams; ham radio; Linux info @  | free since January 1998.
  http://www.qsl.net/n0nb/   |  Debian, the choice of
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Re: creating audio-cd image from mp3/wav

2004-07-31 Thread Nate Bargmann
* Micha Feigin [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2004 Jul 31 08:40 -0500]:
 Read through the whole man page and some other stuff also. Audio cds
 don't have a file system, so they are not iso9660 cds. They basically
 only have the raw data stream in 16-bit stereo samples in PCM coding at
 44100 samples/second with no header. I don't know the endianess
 though. They also need to have an integral number of blocks in length.
 
 I guess the solution will have to be to use sox to create the raw files
 and then write my own program to create the image or hack into cdrecord
 to enable it to dump its data to file skipping the drive commands.

Okay, Micha, that makes sense.  It was worth a guess and I hadn't seen
it mentioned in this thread.  Perhaps you need a tool that simply does
the reverse of cdparanoia, i.e. takes .wav track files and builds them 
into a CD image like PCM file.  Easy to say, perhaps not so easy to 
implement.

- Nate 

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  Amateur radio exams; ham radio; Linux info @  | free since January 1998.
 http://www.qsl.net/n0nb/   |  Debian, the choice of
 My Kawasaki KZ-650 SR @| a GNU generation!
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Re: creating audio-cd image from mp3/wav

2004-07-30 Thread csj
On 30. July 2004 at 5:02AM +0300,
Micha Feigin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 On Fri, Jul 30, 2004 at 07:15:16AM +0800, csj wrote:
  On 29. July 2004 at 3:06PM +0300,
  Micha Feigin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  
   How do I create an audio cd image on disk?
   
   I tried looking into xcdroast (which I normally use),
   cdrecord, burn, mp3burn and a bunch of other console tools,
   and it seems that there is no problem to write audio
   directly to cd from wav/mp3/ogg and create data iso images
   on disk, but I couldn't seem to find anything that can
   write an audio-cd image to disk.
  
  cdrdao?
  
 
 As far as I can tell if I copy a cd, I can use --keep-image to
 keep the image on disk, but there doesn't seem a way to just
 create the image without burning it (somehow I don't thing
 /dev/null will work here, as it is looking for a scsi device,
 but maybe, will try that idea tomorrow). Anyway, it requires an
 image already on disk or cd, I only have a bunch of mp3 files.

Not a solution:

Since cdrecord can burn cd-compatible wav files on the fly, why
not just create the wav files in one directory, making sure the
files are arranged in track order, say track01.wav, track02.wav?
If you need special options like cd text put it in a script, so
you can simply type something like my_audio_burn.sh
./Track_Directory/*wav.


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Re: creating audio-cd image from mp3/wav

2004-07-30 Thread Micha Feigin
On Sat, Jul 31, 2004 at 07:07:52AM +0800, csj wrote:
 On 30. July 2004 at 5:02AM +0300,
 Micha Feigin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  On Fri, Jul 30, 2004 at 07:15:16AM +0800, csj wrote:
   On 29. July 2004 at 3:06PM +0300,
   Micha Feigin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
   
How do I create an audio cd image on disk?

I tried looking into xcdroast (which I normally use),
cdrecord, burn, mp3burn and a bunch of other console tools,
and it seems that there is no problem to write audio
directly to cd from wav/mp3/ogg and create data iso images
on disk, but I couldn't seem to find anything that can
write an audio-cd image to disk.
   
   cdrdao?
   
  
  As far as I can tell if I copy a cd, I can use --keep-image to
  keep the image on disk, but there doesn't seem a way to just
  create the image without burning it (somehow I don't thing
  /dev/null will work here, as it is looking for a scsi device,
  but maybe, will try that idea tomorrow). Anyway, it requires an
  image already on disk or cd, I only have a bunch of mp3 files.
 
 Not a solution:
 
 Since cdrecord can burn cd-compatible wav files on the fly, why
 not just create the wav files in one directory, making sure the
 files are arranged in track order, say track01.wav, track02.wav?
 If you need special options like cd text put it in a script, so
 you can simply type something like my_audio_burn.sh
 ./Track_Directory/*wav.
 

I never intend for the files to go to the cdrom, otherwise the solution
would be easy. I want to create an image I can mount in vmware so that
windows will think its a regular audio cd so that I can download it to
my mini disk using Sony simple burner, thus bypassing Sony jukebox which
does havoc and I really don't like anyway since it lets you download
each file only three times to mini disk, and you can't delete it from
the mini disk directly, you have to do it through the sony jukebox
(even if the file is yours, or you own the cd).

Now if only the libnetmd people finally figure out how to record to a
netmd mini disk directly from Linux, or Sony stopped being so paranoid
and windows centric, life would be a lot easier ;-)

 
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Re: creating audio-cd image from mp3/wav

2004-07-30 Thread Nate Bargmann
* Micha Feigin [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2004 Jul 30 18:42 -0500]:
 I never intend for the files to go to the cdrom, otherwise the solution
 would be easy. I want to create an image I can mount in vmware so that
 windows will think its a regular audio cd so that I can download it to
 my mini disk using Sony simple burner, thus bypassing Sony jukebox which
 does havoc and I really don't like anyway since it lets you download
 each file only three times to mini disk, and you can't delete it from
 the mini disk directly, you have to do it through the sony jukebox
 (even if the file is yours, or you own the cd).
 
 Now if only the libnetmd people finally figure out how to record to a
 netmd mini disk directly from Linux, or Sony stopped being so paranoid
 and windows centric, life would be a lot easier ;-)

Have you tried mkisofs?  I haven't played with it myself, but I think
that is what X-CD-Roast uses to create an image in the Master mode.

From the man page:

MKISOFS(8)  MKISOFS(8)

NAME
   mkisofs  - create an hybrid ISO9660/JOLIET/HFS filesystem with optional
   Rock Ridge attributes.

SYNOPSIS
   mkisofs [ options ] [ -o filename ] pathspec [pathspec ...]

DESCRIPTION
   mkisofs  is  effectively  a  pre-mastering  program  to   generate   an
   ISO9660/JOLIET/HFS hybrid filesystem.

   mkisofs  is  capable  of  generating  the  System  Use Sharing Protocol
   records (SUSP) specified by the Rock Ridge Interchange Protocol.   This
   is  used  to  further describe the files in the iso9660 filesystem to a
   unix host, and provides information such as longer filenames,  uid/gid,
   posix permissions, symbolic links, block and character devices.

.
.
.

- Nate 

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Re: creating audio-cd image from mp3/wav

2004-07-30 Thread Brad Sims
On Friday 30 July 2004 6:07 pm, csj wrote:

 Since cdrecord can burn cd-compatible wav files on the fly, why
 not just create the wav files in one directory, making sure the
 files are arranged in track order, say track01.wav, track02.wav?
 If you need special options like cd text put it in a script, so
 you can simply type something like my_audio_burn.sh
 ./Track_Directory/*wav.

Or you can simply use K3B it will both create a iso from
mp3s and burn isos. 
I wish that program was ported to windows... its that damn good.

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creating audio-cd image from mp3/wav

2004-07-29 Thread Micha Feigin
How do I create an audio cd image on disk?

I tried looking into xcdroast (which I normally use), cdrecord, burn,
mp3burn and a bunch of other console tools, and it seems that there is
no problem to write audio directly to cd from wav/mp3/ogg and create
data iso images on disk, but I couldn't seem to find anything that
can write an audio-cd image to disk.

I would rather use xcdroast or command line tool here if possible,
rather then the gnome/k3b programs (which I don't know if they work
either)

(I need it in order to write the audio to mini-disk, workaround
around the ridiculous Sony limitations).

Thanks


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Re: creating audio-cd image from mp3/wav

2004-07-29 Thread Alexandros Papadopoulos
On Thursday 29 July 2004 15:06, Micha Feigin wrote:
 How do I create an audio cd image on disk?

 I tried looking into xcdroast (which I normally use), cdrecord, burn,
 mp3burn and a bunch of other console tools, and it seems that there
 is no problem to write audio directly to cd from wav/mp3/ogg and
 create data iso images on disk, but I couldn't seem to find anything
 that can write an audio-cd image to disk.

 I would rather use xcdroast or command line tool here if possible,
 rather then the gnome/k3b programs (which I don't know if they work
 either)

k3b works fine here. Start a new audio CD project, import all mp3/ogg 
files you wish, and then instruct it to create image only.

 (I need it in order to write the audio to mini-disk, workaround
 around the ridiculous Sony limitations).

Good luck with that! :-)

-A


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Re: creating audio-cd image from mp3/wav

2004-07-29 Thread matt zagrabelny
On Thu, 2004-07-29 at 07:06, Micha Feigin wrote:
 How do I create an audio cd image on disk?
 

i *think* you could use dd get the image off of a disc.



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Re: creating audio-cd image from mp3/wav

2004-07-29 Thread Micha Feigin
On Thu, Jul 29, 2004 at 04:08:57PM +0300, Alexandros Papadopoulos wrote:
 On Thursday 29 July 2004 15:06, Micha Feigin wrote:
  How do I create an audio cd image on disk?
 
  I tried looking into xcdroast (which I normally use), cdrecord, burn,
  mp3burn and a bunch of other console tools, and it seems that there
  is no problem to write audio directly to cd from wav/mp3/ogg and
  create data iso images on disk, but I couldn't seem to find anything
  that can write an audio-cd image to disk.
 
  I would rather use xcdroast or command line tool here if possible,
  rather then the gnome/k3b programs (which I don't know if they work
  either)
 
 k3b works fine here. Start a new audio CD project, import all mp3/ogg 
 files you wish, and then instruct it to create image only.
 

Just tried it (required installing over 60 MB ;-\

It didn't work, marked the audio files, told it to write an image only
and pressed burn. It showed a progress report, worked around a bit, and
in the end all I got was a bunch of wav files, but no image. Anything
different on your end?

  (I need it in order to write the audio to mini-disk, workaround
  around the ridiculous Sony limitations).
 
 Good luck with that! :-)
 
 -A
 
 
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Re: creating audio-cd image from mp3/wav

2004-07-29 Thread csj
On 29. July 2004 at 3:06PM +0300,
Micha Feigin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 How do I create an audio cd image on disk?
 
 I tried looking into xcdroast (which I normally use), cdrecord,
 burn, mp3burn and a bunch of other console tools, and it seems
 that there is no problem to write audio directly to cd from
 wav/mp3/ogg and create data iso images on disk, but I couldn't
 seem to find anything that can write an audio-cd image to disk.

cdrdao?


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Re: creating audio-cd image from mp3/wav

2004-07-29 Thread Micha Feigin
On Fri, Jul 30, 2004 at 07:15:16AM +0800, csj wrote:
 On 29. July 2004 at 3:06PM +0300,
 Micha Feigin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  How do I create an audio cd image on disk?
  
  I tried looking into xcdroast (which I normally use), cdrecord,
  burn, mp3burn and a bunch of other console tools, and it seems
  that there is no problem to write audio directly to cd from
  wav/mp3/ogg and create data iso images on disk, but I couldn't
  seem to find anything that can write an audio-cd image to disk.
 
 cdrdao?
 

As far as I can tell if I copy a cd, I can use --keep-image to keep the
image on disk, but there doesn't seem a way to just create the image
without burning it (somehow I don't thing /dev/null will work here, as
it is looking for a scsi device, but maybe, will try that idea
tomorrow). Anyway, it requires an image already on disk or cd, I only
have a bunch of mp3 files.

 
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Re: mp3 --- wav

2001-09-22 Thread Dan Born
By default mpg123 plays the mp3.  Use the -s option to have it send its data 
to stdout.  See the manpage for more info.

On Saturday 22 September 2001 09:53 am, John Griffiths wrote:
 At 08:37 PM 9/21/01 -0700, Craig Dickson wrote:
 John Griffiths wrote:
  does anyone know a good tool for converting mp3's back to .wav for
  burning to audio cd?
 
 Sure. mpg321 -w. XMMS will do it too, I think, if you specify the Disk
 Output plugin.
 
 Craig

 ok i think u were referring to mpg123?

 now here's the bit where i'm a real pain in the ass, the machine i'm doing
 this on doesn't have the couns card configured.. and mpg123 -w is asking
 for /dev/dsp

 anyway to do this without a sound card configured? it's not like i want to
 play the music on this thing...



Re: mp3 --- wav

2001-09-22 Thread John Griffiths
At 12:03 AM 9/22/01 -0400, Dan Born wrote:
By default mpg123 plays the mp3.  Use the -s option to have it send its data 
to stdout.  See the manpage for more info.


found a somewhat ugly way to fake it, seems to be working though with -w

the -s option talks about headerless data in the man page:

The  decoded  audio samples are written to standard output, instead of playing 
them through  the  audio device.   This  option  must  be used if your audio 
hardware is not supported by  mpg123.   The  output format  is  raw 
(headerless) linear PCM audio data, 16 bit, stereo, host byte order.

forgive my ignorance, is that a .wav file?



Re: mp3 --- wav

2001-09-22 Thread Mike McGuire
On Sat, Sep 22, 2001 at 02:09:19PM +, John Griffiths wrote:
 
 found a somewhat ugly way to fake it, seems to be working though with -w
 
 the -s option talks about headerless data in the man page:
 
 The  decoded  audio samples are written to standard output, instead of 
 playing them through  the  audio device.   This  option  must  be used if 
 your audio hardware is not supported by  mpg123.   The  output format is
 raw (headerless) linear PCM audio data, 16 bit, stereo, host byte order.
 
 forgive my ignorance, is that a .wav file?

nope. WAV's have headers. So headerless wouldn't be it.

Although I think a .wav is just a fairly simple header tacked on to 
that raw PCM data; it's possible to generate a .wav header. Also, I 
think some cd-burning software (quite likely if it's linux :) can 
burn WAV or PCM or some other format. WAV should always work, tho.

Short answer: if -w works, go with it. :)

HTH,
Mike McGuire



Re: mp3 --- wav

2001-09-22 Thread Martin F Krafft
also sprach John Griffiths (on Sat, 22 Sep 2001 01:53:31PM +):
 Sure. mpg321 -w. XMMS will do it too, I think, if you specify the Disk
 Output plugin.
 
 ok i think u were referring to mpg123? 

he wasn't. drop-in mpg321 is a replacement for mpg123, which doesn't
come with the problematic licensing and which outperforms mpg123
anyway.

martin;  (greetings from the heart of the sun.)
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 it will soon fall into disuse.
 -- philip hale, boston music critic, 1837


pgpDnkrLfiEKb.pgp
Description: PGP signature


mp3 --- wav

2001-09-21 Thread John Griffiths
does anyone know a good tool for converting mp3's back to .wav for burning to 
audio cd?

(no mp3 player in the car)

TIA

John



Re: mp3 --- wav

2001-09-21 Thread Craig Dickson
John Griffiths wrote:

 does anyone know a good tool for converting mp3's back to .wav for
 burning to audio cd?

Sure. mpg321 -w. XMMS will do it too, I think, if you specify the Disk
Output plugin.

Craig



Re: mp3 --- wav

2001-09-21 Thread dman
On Sat, Sep 22, 2001 at 12:57:11PM +, John Griffiths wrote:
| does anyone know a good tool for converting mp3's back to .wav for burning to 
audio cd?
| 
| (no mp3 player in the car)

If you have some spare dough, the Rio Car looks quite interesting.
Runs Debian too.

-D



Re: mp3 --- wav

2001-09-21 Thread John Griffiths
At 08:37 PM 9/21/01 -0700, Craig Dickson wrote:
John Griffiths wrote:

 does anyone know a good tool for converting mp3's back to .wav for
 burning to audio cd?

Sure. mpg321 -w. XMMS will do it too, I think, if you specify the Disk
Output plugin.

Craig

ok i think u were referring to mpg123? 

now here's the bit where i'm a real pain in the ass, the machine i'm doing this 
on doesn't have the couns card configured.. and mpg123 -w is asking for /dev/dsp

anyway to do this without a sound card configured? it's not like i want to play 
the music on this thing...



Q: mp3 wav / sound

2000-10-07 Thread Michael Steiner
Hi to all!

I can't play .wav or .mp3 files on my system.
I can play cdroms.
cdparanoia seems to work and encodes cdrom-tracks to .wav files, but
when I try to play them no sound at all (splay, mpg123 ...)

I have a Creative VibraX card installed.

Question:

1. Is the VibraX card the problem ?
2. What HW is needed ?
3. What resources are needed to play mp3 or wav files ?
4. What modules do I need ?

I looked back this list till February, but couldn't find no information.
I'm ready to buy a new soundcard etc. if necessary.
Installed is here potato with kernel 2.2.17prexxx

Please give me some hints where to look/read or your experience.

Best regards
Michael

-- 
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Re: Q: mp3 wav / sound

2000-10-07 Thread loki
On Sat, Oct 07, 2000 at 10:36:26AM +0200, Michael Steiner wrote:

 I can't play .wav or .mp3 files on my system.
 I can play cdroms.
 cdparanoia seems to work and encodes cdrom-tracks to .wav files, but
 when I try to play them no sound at all (splay, mpg123 ...)
 
 I have a Creative VibraX card installed.

Most likely you'll have to compile a new kernel with support for
your particular sound card (or rather, the chipset it uses). Do cat
/dev/sndstat to see the current status.

 Question:
[snipped]
 3. What resources are needed to play mp3 or wav files ?

Install the sox package, which will give you sox and the play
wrapper which can play wavs.  mpg123 is a popular (non-free) console
mp3 player, or XMMS for a graphical one (GTK-based).

 4. What modules do I need ?

soundcore.o, sound.o (generic support) plus your particular soundcard.


HTH,


-- 
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[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Dare I disturb the universe?  You bet I do! :)



Re: MP3 -- WAV

1999-06-27 Thread Sami Dalouche
You could try mp3asm

On Fri, Jun 25, 1999 at 09:30:51PM +0800, Hans van den Boogert wrote:
 Thanks, bedankt, merci, gracias, xie xie. It worked, but alas the header of
 the MP3 file was corrupted, so even Sox couldn't help out here. -- Hans
 
 
 
 At 04:18 PM 6/24/99 +0200, Remco van 't Veer wrote:
 The following will create a.wav from a.mp3.
 
   mpg123 -s a.mp3 | sox -t raw -r 44100 -w -s -c 2 - a.wav
 
 
 On Thu, Jun 24, 1999 at 20:50, Hans van den Boogert wrote:
 
  Does anybody know of an app that decodes MP3 to WAV or AU? 
 
 
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Re: MP3 -- WAV

1999-06-25 Thread Hans van den Boogert
Thanks, bedankt, merci, gracias, xie xie. It worked, but alas the header of
the MP3 file was corrupted, so even Sox couldn't help out here. -- Hans



At 04:18 PM 6/24/99 +0200, Remco van 't Veer wrote:
The following will create a.wav from a.mp3.

  mpg123 -s a.mp3 | sox -t raw -r 44100 -w -s -c 2 - a.wav


On Thu, Jun 24, 1999 at 20:50, Hans van den Boogert wrote:

 Does anybody know of an app that decodes MP3 to WAV or AU? 


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MP3 -- WAV

1999-06-24 Thread Hans van den Boogert
Does anybody know of an app that decodes MP3 to WAV or AU? 


Re: MP3 -- WAV

1999-06-24 Thread Remco van 't Veer
The following will create a.wav from a.mp3.

  mpg123 -s a.mp3 | sox -t raw -r 44100 -w -s -c 2 - a.wav


On Thu, Jun 24, 1999 at 20:50, Hans van den Boogert wrote:

 Does anybody know of an app that decodes MP3 to WAV or AU? 


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Re: MP3 -- WAV

1999-06-24 Thread eric a. Farris
On 24 Jun, Hans van den Boogert wrote:
 Does anybody know of an app that decodes MP3 to WAV or AU? 

All *nixes excel at providing little tools that, when used together, can
replace a lot of stand-alone tools on other platforms.

if you have mpg123 and sox (both available as debian packages), you
have everything you need.

this line has worked for me:

mpg123 -b 1 -s file.mp3 | sox -t raw -r 44100 -s -w -c2 - file.wav

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courtesy of Debian GNU/Linux www.debian.org

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Re: MP3 - WAV

1999-03-31 Thread Rafael Cordones Marcos
On Mon, Mar 29, 1999 at 08:16:01PM -0500, Ugo Enrico Albarello wrote:
 El Mon, Mar 29, 1999 at 10:17:21PM +, Rafael Cordones Marcos dijo:
 
  Hola,
 Hola...
 
 [Pasar de MP3 a WAV]
  
  lazlo:~$ mpg123 -s fichero.mp3
   
  Y ahora con sox quiero leer de la entrada standard pero no me sale!
  
  lazlo:~$ sox -t raw -u -r 44100 -w -c 2 - snd.wav
 
 Y si intentas `mpg123 -s fichero.mp3  archivo.wav`?

Esto no funciona pero

mpg123 -s fichero.mp3 | sox -t raw -s -r 44100 -w -c 2 - salida.wav

sí!

De hecho, uso salida.cdr para luego grabar el CD.

Gracias Paco Brufal!
 
Best regards,

Rafa C. Marcos
BCN Art Directe (Promotora d'Art)
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Re: MP3 - WAV

1999-03-30 Thread Ugo Enrico Albarello
El Mon, Mar 29, 1999 at 10:17:21PM +, Rafael Cordones Marcos dijo:

 Hola,
Hola...

[Pasar de MP3 a WAV]
 
 lazlo:~$ mpg123 -s fichero.mp3
  
 Y ahora con sox quiero leer de la entrada standard pero no me sale!
 
 lazlo:~$ sox -t raw -u -r 44100 -w -c 2 - snd.wav

Y si intentas `mpg123 -s fichero.mp3  archivo.wav`?

-- 
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 [EMAIL PROTECTED] | DEBIAN GNU/LINUX 2.0 |  www.gnu.org
 -
   Always Free, Always Cool, Always Linux


Re: MP3 - WAV

1999-03-30 Thread Paco Brufal
On Mon, 29 Mar 1999, Rafael Cordones Marcos wrote:

 lazlo:~$ mpg123 -s fichero.mp3

mpg123 -s fichero.mp3 | sox -t raw -s -r 44100 -w -c 2 - salida.wav

---
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---

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MP3 - WAV

1999-03-29 Thread Rafael Cordones Marcos

Hola,

Estoy intentando pasar archivos MP3 a formato WAV o mejor a formato
para grabar en CD.

Por ahora he conseguido:

lazlo:~$ mpg123 -s fichero.mp3

  The  decoded  audio samples are written to standard
  output, instead of playing them through  the  audio
  device.   This  option  must  be used if your audio
  hardware is not supported by  mpg123.   The  output
  format  is  raw (headerless) linear PCM audio data,
  16 bit, stereo, host byte order.

Y ahora con sox quiero leer de la entrada standard pero no me sale!

lazlo:~$ sox -t raw -u -r 44100 -w -c 2 - snd.wav

Best regards,

Rafa C. Marcos
BCN Art Directe (Promotora d'Art)
http://www.bcnartdirecte.com


   Info on Euroart'99 and Index·Art at: http://www.bcnartdirecte.com