On Tue, 08 Nov 2005 10:24:15 -0500, Chris Hendrickson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > oops, I sent this with address that is not in the mailing list (they end > up filtering to the same place) so I'm going to send this again just to > be sure since I have not seen it appear on the list. > > If you get multiple copies, my apologies. > > you could write a one or two line script and call THAT along the > lines of > > #!/bin/bash > # downsample_ogg.sh > /usr/bin/oggdec --raw -b 16 -e 1 -o - $1 | /usr/bin/lame -r -s 44.1 > - - -m j -b 64 - - ... > and then set > downsample_medium_ogg = /usr/local/bin/downsample_ogg.sh $FILENAME ... > downsample_medium_ogg = /usr/local/bin/downsample_ogg.sh $FILENAME 64 > downsample_high_ogg = /usr/local/bin/downsample_ogg.sh $FILENAME 128 > etc
Will this actually work? I've recently attempted to reverse this; resample my mp3's into oggs as my ogg-loving friends are convinced that I can have high quality stereo audio at the same bitrate as my lousy audio quality mono mp3 feed I am restricted to in order to stay under 48kbit up for streaming to myself at work. The problem was that the file extensions were wrong, the file I streamed was an ogg, which I did by piecing together the mp3 resample paired with an ogg encode, but it wouldn't play correctly in Winamp or XMMS. If I saved the stream, renamed it .ogg, it would play correctly. So is there something more you're doing, or is this just conjecture at this point? Thanks. _______________________________________________ Gnump3d-users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnump3d-users
