I think your file has other data in it. The last data at the bottom seems to be the good stuff. Well anyway, it looks like the data in the codebook directory.
Not a professional detective though :-) On Wed, Jan 18, 2017 at 6:45 PM, David Rowe <[email protected]> wrote: > Here you go: > > http://rowetel.com/downloads/codec2/train_120_vq > > It's the vector quantiser, for some reason it's rather big in Octave > format (10M). Same files as C source are more reasonable 200k. > > Can show you how it was trained up if that's of interest. One possible > area of optimisation. > > Cheers, > > David > > > On 19/01/17 11:01, Jeroen Vreeken wrote: >> Hi David, >> >> I tried to run the octave code today buty seem to be missing a file >> called 'train_120_vq'. >> Do I have to generate it first? I could not find any reference in the >> rest of the code besides the octave scripts trying to load it... >> >> Regards, >> Jeroen >> >> >> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ >> Check out the vibrant tech community on one of the world's most >> engaging tech sites, SlashDot.org! http://sdm.link/slashdot >> _______________________________________________ >> Freetel-codec2 mailing list >> [email protected] >> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freetel-codec2 >> > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Check out the vibrant tech community on one of the world's most > engaging tech sites, SlashDot.org! http://sdm.link/slashdot > _______________________________________________ > Freetel-codec2 mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freetel-codec2 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Check out the vibrant tech community on one of the world's most engaging tech sites, SlashDot.org! http://sdm.link/slashdot _______________________________________________ Freetel-codec2 mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freetel-codec2
