Hi there,

Hugin is quite ingenuous and I've been using it for a while now... I
am slightly puzzled I haven't seen the same idea applied for stitching
audio together? As I can imagine it could use much of the same
underlying algorithms from Hugin.

A couple of examples where I see such a tool can be useful.

If you make lots of field recordings outdoors, and these recordings
are either corrupted with noise, or recorded from different location
and under different conditions. Since you have multiple instances of
the same source. I can imagine stitching multiple recordings may
generate a cleaner recording using an audio equivalent of Hugin? The
same idea of using control points apply here, to help anchor the
points in the recordings.

A second example.. Perhaps you have sourced audio from an old movie,
but the audio from the movie is corrupted at certain locations in the
film. However, you may have several different masters of the movie,
all experiencing audio degradations at different locations, and may
all experience some time-stretching due to analogue playback. This is
where something like an Audio Hugin can do a good job of time-aligning
and removing spurious noise, probably giving way to creating a cleaner
audio recording that is almost impossible to manually create via a
waveform editor...

Sorry if this sounds way off topic. I originally wished to post this
question to Paulo but I could not find his e-mail address..


S



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