Frankly I had to ask Wikipedia what LKFS and LUFS is. They are loudness standards, they don't indicate compression method.
Here's a peculiar method which uses detection of instantaneous amplitudes instead of peak sample values: http://www.katjaas.nl/compander/compander.html From an engineer's viewpoint this approach is highly debatable and you wouldn't use it for all purposes. But it reacts super fast to transients. I use it on acoustic input in live performance. Katja On Wed, Mar 16, 2016 at 7:51 AM, William Huston <williamahus...@gmail.com> wrote: > Has anyone played around with LKFS or LUFS-based > "Loudness Compression"? > > This would be a really handy thing to have > for anyone who creates audio for broadcast TV or Radio, > or movie scores, etc. > > When people grab a compressor, this is what > we mostly want. However, in my experience, > most compressors are peak-level compressors. > > Thanks for any leads/pointers. > > > -- > -- > May you, and all beings > be happy and free from suffering :) > -- ancient Buddhist Prayer (Metta) > > _______________________________________________ > Pd-list@lists.iem.at mailing list > UNSUBSCRIBE and account-management -> > http://lists.puredata.info/listinfo/pd-list > _______________________________________________ Pd-list@lists.iem.at mailing list UNSUBSCRIBE and account-management -> http://lists.puredata.info/listinfo/pd-list