Re: taking many 198k mp3 files and converting them to 16k mp3
On Wed, Aug 30, 2006 at 10:08:04AM +0100, Howard Jones wrote: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > If your DVD player can't play mp3s, then it can't play DVDs. ;) > > Remember, mp3s are the audio layer of mpegs. And DVD videos consist of > > mpegs. > > For a DVD-Video disc, the audio formats are PCM (plain old wav, > effectively), AC-3 (dolby digital) and MPEG-1 Audio Layer II (only). > > A lot of DVD players will also play MP3s, either on data CDs or data > DVDs (or both), but it isn't a requirement as far as I can tell. The > choices seem pretty arbitrary too. My Pioneer player will play a DVD-R > full of MP3s, but the replacement model will only play MP3 CD-Rs (and > you have to read the fine print in the manual to figure it out, too). It > seems that a lot of DivX-playing DVD players only play CDs of DivX, not > DVDs too (Toshiba, Pioneer again). > > That's why I was fiddling around with MP2 and minimal video - it's an > actual standard DVD then. Although in fact I made an NTSC disc with MP2, > which is apparently a no-no. > > My source was for the audio info was: > http://stream.uen.org/medsol/dvd/pages/dvd_format_audio4DVDvideo.html > Great URL. If you or anybody else has any other audio type pages, please do post them. (Time I caught up to the 20th century. :-|) A related area is the brand new 'mp4' or 'aacplus' format. I don't care much how good the audio quality is most of the tme. But I've listed to sites that play 24k mp3 and 24k aacplus, and the difference is significant. For voice, it's a dontcare. But for music, bigdifference. gary > Howie -- Gary Kline [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.thought.org Public service Unix ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: taking many 198k mp3 files and converting them to 16k mp3
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > If your DVD player can't play mp3s, then it can't play DVDs. ;) > Remember, mp3s are the audio layer of mpegs. And DVD videos consist of > mpegs. For a DVD-Video disc, the audio formats are PCM (plain old wav, effectively), AC-3 (dolby digital) and MPEG-1 Audio Layer II (only). A lot of DVD players will also play MP3s, either on data CDs or data DVDs (or both), but it isn't a requirement as far as I can tell. The choices seem pretty arbitrary too. My Pioneer player will play a DVD-R full of MP3s, but the replacement model will only play MP3 CD-Rs (and you have to read the fine print in the manual to figure it out, too). It seems that a lot of DivX-playing DVD players only play CDs of DivX, not DVDs too (Toshiba, Pioneer again). That's why I was fiddling around with MP2 and minimal video - it's an actual standard DVD then. Although in fact I made an NTSC disc with MP2, which is apparently a no-no. My source was for the audio info was: http://stream.uen.org/medsol/dvd/pages/dvd_format_audio4DVDvideo.html Howie ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: taking many 198k mp3 files and converting them to 16k mp3
On Sun, Aug 27, 2006 at 06:13:40PM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > I suppose I can buy a DVD-R[W] and fnd out, but is there any reason > > why I can't have many hours of audio on a DVD? In other words, id a DVD > > *only* for video? --Might be nice to gather (parts of) my favorite CD's > > onto one Very long-playing disk. > > If your DVD player can't play mp3s, then it can't play DVDs. ;) > Remember, mp3s are the audio layer of mpegs. And DVD videos consist of > mpegs. The main issue I've had is that some (particularly older) DVD players won't recognise the file system on data DVDs (neither ISO or UDF), and so won't see that there are MP3s on the disc. The same players happily accepted MP3s on data CDs though. Blank CDs are also dirt cheap. Based on my rough calculations, you should be able to store about 3000 minutes (50 hours) of 32 kbit MP3 audio on a single 700 Mb data CD. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: taking many 198k mp3 files and converting them to 16k mp3
On Mon, Aug 28, 2006 at 01:56:31PM +0100, Howard Jones wrote: > Gary Kline wrote: > > Well, if/when you *do* try, please clue me in. --I'm too new to > > DVD's and tooo che--er, thrifty to buy a ten pack of blanks. I'm > > not sure that I have three hours of "favorites"; probably, but no > > more. Most of my favorite tunes are on tape--pre-recorded and > > hi-fidelity, but the problem is turnning analogue to digital. > > Thrift isn't really an issue nowadays - you can get 50 DVD-Rs for about > $10-15 online. Cheap enough to use a few to experiement, in my opinion. Wow! that really *is* a deal. About where the floppies were years back. I was guessing $2.50+ per blank. > > I did some experimenting last night, and got what seems to be a working > solution. I don't have a DVD burner where I am, so I haven't *actually* > burned one, but 2 software players (Apple's and Media Player Classic) > are both happy with the VIDEO_TS files. From my brief research, the > minimum bitrate for DVD audio is 32Khz, and there isn't a minimum for > the video, only a maximum. There is also a video-CD-like frame size of > 352x480 for NTSC so you can reduced the video size further. > > For my test audio file (2:12 song), I got: > 2.2MB Original MP3 file - 192Kbit/sec 44.1Khz sample-rate joint stereo > 3.3MB MP2 file - no changes apart from 44.1->48 resampling > 0.5MB MP2 file - resampled to 48Khz, forced to mono and 32Kbit/sec > output stream > > the 0.5MB file doesn't actually sound *that* bad for music - it's AM > radio quality. It would be fine for speech. > > A 64Kbps video file to go with it is about 2.6MB, so the final 'DVD > file' is either 6.7M ('music' quality) or 4M ('voice' quality). DVD > authoring adds around 800K, but I don't believe this is per-chapter. > > Assuming that it isn't, that's around 2400 minutes on a DVD-R (voice) or > 1500 minutes (music), and it should be playable on any DVD player, since > it should be a full-spec DVD still. Video is a just-say-no in my case; I've got around 26 hours of very high quality (192K) mp3 files (voice) that ought to be just fine at 32K/48KHz monaural. This for the stuff that's taking up hundreds of megs on-disk. As for collecting my favorite, I don't have anywhere near 25 hours (1500 minutes) of them, so maybe I'll wait until "mp4" or "AACplus" [[[ these are the same, right? ]]] is more widely available, then stuff my few hours onto a regular CD-R. > > Here's my notes on producing a disc. This is for an NTSC disc. For PAL, > you need to change 480 to 576 wherever it appears, add 'pal' instead of > 'ntsc' to the dvdauthor line, and "-f 25" instead of "-f 30" in the > transcode line. > > I'm no video expert, so I'm sure there are better ways to do this, but > this one worked for me! Well sir, you are lightyears beyond me!! During my hackery years I worked mostly in the supercomputer realm. Sound? video? on a *computer*??? Faugh! I'm finally learning what I was missing :-) thanks much for your help. same for everybody else who offered help, clues, and code! gary > > Howie > > ## > # Take the MP3 file, play it into toolame as 48Khz PCM data > # toolame reencodes as MP2 (for DVD) at 32khz (the minimum?) in mono > madplay -R48000 -b16 -o wave:- mytestfile.mp3 | toolame -s 48 -b 32 -a > -m m - mytestfile.mp2 > # (take out the -b 32 and -a -m m if you want music quality) > > # next, we'll produce a VERY low bitrate MPEG2 movie of the same length as > # the audio since we have to do *some* encoding here, we might as well make > # the static image be the title of the audio track. > > # this is ALL ONE pipeline > ppmmake blue 352 480 | \ > ppmlabel -x 50 -y 100 -text "This is the track name" | \ > ppmtoy4m -S 420mpeg2 -r -v2 | \ > transcode -x yuv4mpeg,mp3 -y mpeg2enc,null -o mytestfile -p > "mytestfile.mp3" \ > -Z 352x480 -F "8,-b 64" -i /dev/stdin -g 352x480 --import_asr 2 -f > 30 -m /dev/null > > # So that's: make a blank blue image of the correct size for NTSC video > at the smallest size > # add a caption over it > # take that PPM file use it to stream frames into the video transcoder. > # (We only have one frame, so just repeat it) > # transcode takes that frame and encodes it as DVD-compatible 64kbps MPEG-2 > # (normally for a DVD movie it would be more like 5000kpbs) > # we import an audio stream even though we aren't using it, so as to get > the > # right length. Otherwise we get a never-ending video stream :-) > > # So now, there's a .m2v video stream, and a .mp2 audio stream, and we > need to > # multiplex them. > mplex -f 8 -o mytestfile.mpg mytestfile.m2v mytestfile.mp2 > > # *** repeat the above for each of your audio files. *** > > # finally, we can make a simple DVD > dvd
Re: taking many 198k mp3 files and converting them to 16k mp3
Gary Kline wrote: > Well, if/when you *do* try, please clue me in. --I'm too new to > DVD's and tooo che--er, thrifty to buy a ten pack of blanks. I'm > not sure that I have three hours of "favorites"; probably, but no > more. Most of my favorite tunes are on tape--pre-recorded and > hi-fidelity, but the problem is turnning analogue to digital. Thrift isn't really an issue nowadays - you can get 50 DVD-Rs for about $10-15 online. Cheap enough to use a few to experiement, in my opinion. I did some experimenting last night, and got what seems to be a working solution. I don't have a DVD burner where I am, so I haven't *actually* burned one, but 2 software players (Apple's and Media Player Classic) are both happy with the VIDEO_TS files. From my brief research, the minimum bitrate for DVD audio is 32Khz, and there isn't a minimum for the video, only a maximum. There is also a video-CD-like frame size of 352x480 for NTSC so you can reduced the video size further. For my test audio file (2:12 song), I got: 2.2MB Original MP3 file - 192Kbit/sec 44.1Khz sample-rate joint stereo 3.3MB MP2 file - no changes apart from 44.1->48 resampling 0.5MB MP2 file - resampled to 48Khz, forced to mono and 32Kbit/sec output stream the 0.5MB file doesn't actually sound *that* bad for music - it's AM radio quality. It would be fine for speech. A 64Kbps video file to go with it is about 2.6MB, so the final 'DVD file' is either 6.7M ('music' quality) or 4M ('voice' quality). DVD authoring adds around 800K, but I don't believe this is per-chapter. Assuming that it isn't, that's around 2400 minutes on a DVD-R (voice) or 1500 minutes (music), and it should be playable on any DVD player, since it should be a full-spec DVD still. Here's my notes on producing a disc. This is for an NTSC disc. For PAL, you need to change 480 to 576 wherever it appears, add 'pal' instead of 'ntsc' to the dvdauthor line, and "-f 25" instead of "-f 30" in the transcode line. I'm no video expert, so I'm sure there are better ways to do this, but this one worked for me! Howie ## # Take the MP3 file, play it into toolame as 48Khz PCM data # toolame reencodes as MP2 (for DVD) at 32khz (the minimum?) in mono madplay -R48000 -b16 -o wave:- mytestfile.mp3 | toolame -s 48 -b 32 -a -m m - mytestfile.mp2 # (take out the -b 32 and -a -m m if you want music quality) # next, we'll produce a VERY low bitrate MPEG2 movie of the same length as # the audio since we have to do *some* encoding here, we might as well make # the static image be the title of the audio track. # this is ALL ONE pipeline ppmmake blue 352 480 | \ ppmlabel -x 50 -y 100 -text "This is the track name" | \ ppmtoy4m -S 420mpeg2 -r -v2 | \ transcode -x yuv4mpeg,mp3 -y mpeg2enc,null -o mytestfile -p "mytestfile.mp3" \ -Z 352x480 -F "8,-b 64" -i /dev/stdin -g 352x480 --import_asr 2 -f 30 -m /dev/null # So that's: make a blank blue image of the correct size for NTSC video at the smallest size # add a caption over it # take that PPM file use it to stream frames into the video transcoder. # (We only have one frame, so just repeat it) # transcode takes that frame and encodes it as DVD-compatible 64kbps MPEG-2 # (normally for a DVD movie it would be more like 5000kpbs) # we import an audio stream even though we aren't using it, so as to get the # right length. Otherwise we get a never-ending video stream :-) # So now, there's a .m2v video stream, and a .mp2 audio stream, and we need to # multiplex them. mplex -f 8 -o mytestfile.mpg mytestfile.m2v mytestfile.mp2 # *** repeat the above for each of your audio files. *** # finally, we can make a simple DVD dvdauthor -v ntsc+4:3+352x480 -a mp2+en+1ch+16bps -t -o testdvd mytestfile.mpg dvdauthor -T -o testdvd # if you used 'music' quality encoding in toolame, then use 2ch instead of 1ch here # You should find a DVD structure (VIDEO_TS, AUDIO_TS) waiting in the 'testdvd' directory. # you can specify multiple .mpg files on the command line, and each one will #become a chapter on the DVD # FINALLY, to get a burnable ISO image: mkisofs -dvd-video -o testdvd.iso testdvd # and burn it to /dev/acd0: growisofs -dvd-compat -Z /dev/acd0=testdvd.iso # Ports used: # sysutils/dvd+rw-tools (growisofs) # sysutils/cdrtools (mkisofs - installed as a dependency of dvd+rw-tools) # mjpegtools (mplex, y4m stuff) # netpbm(ppmfile, ppmlabel) # toolame (MPEG Layer II encoding) # madplay (MP3 decoding) # dvdauthor (final authoring) # transcode (install this last, so it gets the mpeg2encode from mjpegtools) ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: taking many 198k mp3 files and converting them to 16k mp3
On Sun, Aug 27, 2006 at 10:38:05PM +0100, Howard Jones wrote: > hackmiester (Hunter Fuller) wrote: > >On 27 August 2006, at 02:49, Gary Kline wrote: > >>--Might be nice to gather (parts of) my favorite CD's > >>onto one Very long-playing disk. > > > >That would require you to burn an audio DVD, which you couldn't read > >in a normal CD drive... and I really don't know how exactly you would > >do it either... > > Not necessarily. Both of my current DVD players can play a DVD full of > MP3 files. One is a Pioneer, and the other is a more 'random' brand > DVD/DiVX player. The Pioneer does a better job, but both will "play" > data discs of MP3, WMA, JPEG and MPEG1 amongst other things. > > Another possibility would be to convert to MP2 audio and make a minimal > video stream to go alongside the audio - say, a black screen, and make a > DVD Video disk using something like transcode. I don't know what the > bare minimum video bitrate is for DVD, but I know you can get a good few > hours that way, in a format that would play on any DVD player. I've been > meaning to try this for ages. Well, if/when you *do* try, please clue me in. --I'm too new to DVD's and tooo che--er, thrifty to buy a ten pack of blanks. I'm not sure that I have three hours of "favorites"; probably, but no more. Most of my favorite tunes are on tape--pre-recorded and hi-fidelity, but the problem is turnning analogue to digital. Anyway, good to know that DVD's can "play" datafiles! gary > > Howie -- Gary Kline [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.thought.org Public service Unix ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: taking many 198k mp3 files and converting them to 16k mp3
> Ah, thank you, thank you. I just can't see wasting so much of my disk > [and bakup disks] for what are mostly voice/lectures. > > I suppose I can buy a DVD-R[W] and fnd out, but is there any reason > why I can't have many hours of audio on a DVD? In other words, id a DVD > *only* for video? --Might be nice to gather (parts of) my favorite > CD's > onto one Very long-playing disk. > If your DVD player can't play mp3s, then it can't play DVDs. ;) Remember, mp3s are the audio layer of mpegs. And DVD videos consist of mpegs. You can downsample mp3s via lame: #!/bin/sh for i in $(ls *.mp3); do lame -b 16 $i -o $i.mp3; done This will leave you with with files named *.mp3.mp3. Check out 'basename' to solve this. Not that your DVD player is going to care. Then use "growisofs" to burn your mp3s to a data DVD: growisofs -Z /dev/insert_device_name_here -J -R . This assumes you issue the growisofs command from the dir where your mp3s are. Happy listening, Steve -- "Sed omnia praeclara tam difficilia, quam rara sunt." 06 12 09 0E 0B 12 15 0C 05 13 ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: taking many 198k mp3 files and converting them to 16k mp3
On 27 August 2006, at 16:38, Howard Jones wrote: hackmiester (Hunter Fuller) wrote: That would require you to burn an audio DVD, which you couldn't read in a normal CD drive... and I really don't know how exactly you would do it either... Not necessarily. Both of my current DVD players can play a DVD full of MP3 files. You bring up a good point, but that's not part of the DVD standard. One is a Pioneer, and the other is a more 'random' brand DVD/DiVX player. The Pioneer does a better job, but both will "play" data discs of MP3, WMA, JPEG and MPEG1 amongst other things. Another possibility would be to convert to MP2 audio and make a minimal video stream to go alongside the audio - say, a black screen, and make a DVD Video disk using something like transcode. The blank video would waste lots of space on the DVD, I think. I don't know what the bare minimum video bitrate is for DVD, but I know you can get a good few hours that way, in a format that would play on any DVD player. I've been meaning to try this for ages. That is true. Howie ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: taking many 198k mp3 files and converting them to 16k mp3
On 27 August 2006, at 16:26, Gary Kline wrote: I have a DVD burner in my newest server; my thinking is that I would burn some N *.mp3 files onto a DVD, then play it back. On what? The questions are whether I would have to create a filesystem, or if the DVD format would allow/see the *.mp3's audio or data. Or what! What DVD format? There is no DVD format. You can put files on one however you want. However, if you want a DVD player to read it, it has to be an ISO file system and files have to be in a certain place. This setup doesn't support mp3s directly, but you might want to look in to the "dvd audio" standard, and I'm not sure if there is a port for buring that, or not... What I'm trying to say, is if you are just gonna play them back on your computer, it doesn't matter where you put them, you can use standard tools like mkisofs, etc.. -- Gary Kline [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.thought.org Public service Unix ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: taking many 198k mp3 files and converting them to 16k mp3
hackmiester (Hunter Fuller) wrote: On 27 August 2006, at 02:49, Gary Kline wrote: --Might be nice to gather (parts of) my favorite CD's onto one Very long-playing disk. That would require you to burn an audio DVD, which you couldn't read in a normal CD drive... and I really don't know how exactly you would do it either... Not necessarily. Both of my current DVD players can play a DVD full of MP3 files. One is a Pioneer, and the other is a more 'random' brand DVD/DiVX player. The Pioneer does a better job, but both will "play" data discs of MP3, WMA, JPEG and MPEG1 amongst other things. Another possibility would be to convert to MP2 audio and make a minimal video stream to go alongside the audio - say, a black screen, and make a DVD Video disk using something like transcode. I don't know what the bare minimum video bitrate is for DVD, but I know you can get a good few hours that way, in a format that would play on any DVD player. I've been meaning to try this for ages. Howie ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: taking many 198k mp3 files and converting them to 16k mp3
On Sun, Aug 27, 2006 at 03:04:10PM -0500, hackmiester (Hunter Fuller) wrote: > > On 27 August 2006, at 02:49, Gary Kline wrote: > > > > > > > Ah, thank you, thank you. I just can't see wasting so much of my > >disk > > [and bakup disks] for what are mostly voice/lectures. > > > > I suppose I can buy a DVD-R[W] and fnd out, but is there any reason > > why I can't have many hours of audio on a DVD? In other words, id > >a DVD > > *only* for video? > > You can always burn a data DVD, like a data CD. > > >--Might be nice to gather (parts of) my favorite CD's > > onto one Very long-playing disk. > > That would require you to burn an audio DVD, which you couldn't read > in a normal CD drive... and I really don't know how exactly you > would do it either... > > > I have a DVD burner in my newest server; my thinking is that I would burn some N *.mp3 files onto a DVD, then play it back. The questions are whether I would have to create a filesystem, or if the DVD format would allow/see the *.mp3's audio or data. Or what! -- Gary Kline [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.thought.org Public service Unix ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: taking many 198k mp3 files and converting them to 16k mp3
On Sunday 27 August 2006 06:36, Gary Kline wrote: > files. > Reply-To: > X-Organization: Thought Unlimited. Public service Unix since 1986. > X-Of_Interest: Observing twenty years of service to the Unix community > > > Is there a way of using sox (or another translator) to turn HUGE > audio mp3 files into much much smaller files? Say taking man mp3 > files that are stored at 198k high fidelity and outputting these to > 16k or 32k mp3 (or *.ogg or other format) audio files? > > thanks for any insights, sugggestions, or pointers, > > gary I wrote this a while back. You might find it useful or be able to update it to do what you need. #!/bin/sh basedir=/home1/convert touch ${basedir}/mp3lock # Convert all mp3 files in $basedir to $bitrate, $samplerate, $channels # where $bitrate, $samplerate and $channels are derived from the pathname. # # $basedir - "top" of the tree to convert. Below $basedir should be two #directories named "todo" and "done". #Below "todo" you must create directories named using this #convention: #@[EMAIL PROTECTED]@cc@ - where bb is the desired bitrate, ss is the desired # samplerate and cc is the channels or mode. The mode # may be one of s, stereo, j, joint-stereo, m, mono, # f, forced joint-stereo or d, duel channel. #The mp3 files will be stored below "todo/@[EMAIL PROTECTED]@cc@" and will be #converted using the parameters extracted from the directory name and #then saved into an identical dir structure below "done". # #Note: Spaces in the filenames will be replaced with underscores. # Spaces in directory names will remain as is # #The original file will be deleted after it has been converted. #Comment out the rm "$filename" near the end to keep the original. # # $ffile - just the filename (in case we need this at a future date) # # $destfile - full, modified, path to the "done" dir tree find "$basedir"/todo -name "*.mp3" -type f | while read filename do destfile=`echo -n "$filename" | sed 's/\/todo\//\/done\//' | sed 's/ /_/g'` ffile=${destfile##*/} fpath=${destfile%/*} # Check if dest. path exists, create if req. if [ ! -d "$fpath" ] then mkdir -p "$fpath" fi # Get conversion parameters from pathname bitrate=`echo $destfile | cut -f 2 -d @` samplerate=`echo $destfile | cut -f 3 -d @` channels=`echo $destfile | cut -f 4 -d @` echonice -n 20 lame -h -b $bitrate --resample $samplerate -m $channels "$filename" "$destfile" #rm "$filename" done rm `echo ${basedir}/mp3lock` -- Dave ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: taking many 198k mp3 files and converting them to 16k mp3
On 27 August 2006, at 02:49, Gary Kline wrote: Ah, thank you, thank you. I just can't see wasting so much of my disk [and bakup disks] for what are mostly voice/lectures. I suppose I can buy a DVD-R[W] and fnd out, but is there any reason why I can't have many hours of audio on a DVD? In other words, id a DVD *only* for video? You can always burn a data DVD, like a data CD. --Might be nice to gather (parts of) my favorite CD's onto one Very long-playing disk. That would require you to burn an audio DVD, which you couldn't read in a normal CD drive... and I really don't know how exactly you would do it either... gary -- Gary Kline [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.thought.org Public service Unix ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions- [EMAIL PROTECTED]" ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: taking many 198k mp3 files and converting them to 16k mp3
On Sun, Aug 27, 2006 at 04:01:23PM +1000, andrew clarke wrote: > On Sat, Aug 26, 2006 at 10:36:54PM -0700, Gary Kline wrote: > > > Is there a way of using sox (or another translator) to turn HUGE > > audio mp3 files into much much smaller files? Say taking man mp3 > > files that are stored at 198k high fidelity and outputting these to > > 16k or 32k mp3 (or *.ogg or other format) audio files? > > LAME (audio/lame in Ports) will do conversions: > > bash-2.05b$ lame -b 32 -h Python411_060823_Milestones.mp3 > ID3v2 found. Be aware that the ID3 tag is currently lost when transcoding. > LAME version 3.96.1 (http://lame.sourceforge.net/) > CPU features: MMX (ASM used), 3DNow! (ASM used) > Resampling: input 32 kHz output 22.05 kHz > Using polyphase lowpass filter, transition band: 8269 Hz - 8535 Hz > Encoding Python411_060823_Milestones.mp3 > to Python411_060823_Milestones.mp3.mp3 > Encoding as 22.05 kHz 32 kbps single-ch MPEG-2 Layer III (11x) qval=2 > Frame | CPU time/estim | REAL time/estim | play/CPU |ETA >600/40388 ( 1%)|0:07/8:35|0:07/8:51| 2.0471x|8:43 > > etc. > > If you want to do multiple files you'll need to write a script to call > LAME multiple times. Ah, thank you, thank you. I just can't see wasting so much of my disk [and bakup disks] for what are mostly voice/lectures. I suppose I can buy a DVD-R[W] and fnd out, but is there any reason why I can't have many hours of audio on a DVD? In other words, id a DVD *only* for video? --Might be nice to gather (parts of) my favorite CD's onto one Very long-playing disk. gary -- Gary Kline [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.thought.org Public service Unix ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: taking many 198k mp3 files and converting them to 16k mp3
On Sat, Aug 26, 2006 at 10:36:54PM -0700, Gary Kline wrote: > Is there a way of using sox (or another translator) to turn HUGE > audio mp3 files into much much smaller files? Say taking man mp3 > files that are stored at 198k high fidelity and outputting these to > 16k or 32k mp3 (or *.ogg or other format) audio files? LAME (audio/lame in Ports) will do conversions: bash-2.05b$ lame -b 32 -h Python411_060823_Milestones.mp3 ID3v2 found. Be aware that the ID3 tag is currently lost when transcoding. LAME version 3.96.1 (http://lame.sourceforge.net/) CPU features: MMX (ASM used), 3DNow! (ASM used) Resampling: input 32 kHz output 22.05 kHz Using polyphase lowpass filter, transition band: 8269 Hz - 8535 Hz Encoding Python411_060823_Milestones.mp3 to Python411_060823_Milestones.mp3.mp3 Encoding as 22.05 kHz 32 kbps single-ch MPEG-2 Layer III (11x) qval=2 Frame | CPU time/estim | REAL time/estim | play/CPU |ETA 600/40388 ( 1%)|0:07/8:35|0:07/8:51| 2.0471x|8:43 etc. If you want to do multiple files you'll need to write a script to call LAME multiple times. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: taking many 198k mp3 files and converting them to 16k mp3
On 8/27/06, Gary Kline <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Is there a way of using sox (or another translator) to turn HUGE audio mp3 files into much much smaller files? Say taking man mp3 files that are stored at 198k high fidelity and outputting these to 16k or 32k mp3 (or *.ogg or other format) audio files? thanks for any insights, sugggestions, or pointers, gary Normally voice files dont' need the sort of fidelity ur talking about. you can make do with a much lower bit rate though i can't give u a number. u have to test it with ur ears. there are plenty of tools out there that give u what u want. sox is one and ffmpeg is another. i am sure there are many other that do as good a job. if i were u i woudnt go for ogg since it causes transcoding losses. If you had a wav file, ogg is ok but since u already have an mp3, ogg doesnt have enuf info to do a good job. HTH, Girish -- Education is an admirable thing but it is good to remember from time to time that anything that is worth knowing cannot be taught. - Oscar Wilde ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
taking many 198k mp3 files and converting them to 16k mp3
files. Reply-To: X-Organization: Thought Unlimited. Public service Unix since 1986. X-Of_Interest: Observing twenty years of service to the Unix community Is there a way of using sox (or another translator) to turn HUGE audio mp3 files into much much smaller files? Say taking man mp3 files that are stored at 198k high fidelity and outputting these to 16k or 32k mp3 (or *.ogg or other format) audio files? thanks for any insights, sugggestions, or pointers, gary -- Gary Kline [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.thought.org Public service Unix ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"