(Replying on-list) You do realise that an "equalizer" is designed to counter the frequency response of your audio setup (i.e. "equalize"), not to "MAKE THE BASS SOUND PHAT PLZ"? :P
Personally I don't see the point of having something to do the latter. Audio engineers put a hell of a lot of effort making music sound exactly how they want it, and I trust their judgements on how the bass should sound better than I trust my own (or anyone else's for that matter). Still, if you're interested in writing a plugin, it's pretty trivial to stick an EQ into the audio pipeline. In fact there might even already be some code for it flying around. Have fun! On Tue, 2007-07-10 at 17:33 -0300, Luís Guilherme Fernandes Pereira wrote: > On 7/10/07, Alex Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Why would you want to equalize Rhythmbox, but not your whole audio > > output? > > > > Your speakers' frequency response curve is not selective! > > He shoud like GAIM sounds as they are, but hear to his songs with a > stronger bass, for instance. I don't know if it's that necessary, but > it's not useless, anyway. > > Cya! > -- Alex Jones http://alex.weej.com/ _______________________________________________ rhythmbox-devel mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/rhythmbox-devel
