cplayer is a small, statically served, client-side album-based audio player for modern web browsers. You simply drop a build into a directory on your web server, create a manifest.json file that describes the album metadata and track URIs and you’re done.
Measures Total Harmonic Distortion (THD) in sound cards, speakers and headphones.
Applies matched filters for maximizing the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) in the presence of additive stochastic noise.
Supports microphone calibration files.
Supports full range of sample rates from 44.056 kHz up to 384 kHz. All sample rates are supported without resampling to avoid any possible loss in accuracy.
This application aims to provide a Fluent Design System based replacement for the old, built-in, Metro Design based Audio/Airplane mode/Brightness flyouts in Windows which are shown while pressing the media or volume keys or even the brightness keys or when airplane/flight mode is toggled.
In case of Windows 11, this application will have the same UI but will provide additional features and customizability compared to the built-in redesigned flyouts.
BassBoom is a music player made with C# using the fast mpg123 library as the native backend that handles the music playback and song information, including the playback device information.
This library is a viable library aimed for cross-platform music playing because we’ve selected mpg123 as the MP3 backend library for its ease of use and for its fast music playback. This library is frictionless as it aims for stability and cross-platform compatibility.
In addition to your regular music files, BassBoom also supports online MPEG radio stations that you can use to play your own favorite radio stations, as long as they don’t use AAC or any other codec that BassBoom doesn’t support.
A media player that’s made to emulate some of your favourite media players from the past & bring them into the future. WACUP (which can be pronounced as wakeup or wac-up or however you prefer it in your native tongue) is my vision of what a media player should be whilst still being compatible with the plug-ins for some of the most popular media players that you are used to. My plan is to include bug fixes, updates of existing features & most importantly new features with the goal to eventually become its own highly compatible media player.
WACUP is heavily based around a plug-in system making it simple to tailor you WACUP install to be what you want it to be. When it’s finally out of being a preview build, an SDK will eventually be offered so new plugins can then be made to add additional features.
NestDrop allows you to perform with high-resolution high-fps visuals which react in realtime to the music and then broadcast the video via Spout. Since the Milkdrop engine is at the core you can easily bring in your own Milkdrop presets. Use any audio source to drive the visuals, even live audio. We know that your attention bandwidth is already in high demand and so we’ve streamlined NestDrop to be simple and fast to use.
Key features:
⇒ Up to 4 video decks with Spout at the same time ⇒ High rez output: > 4k @ 60fps ⇒ Live preview and static thumbnails of presets ⇒ Auto-change presets based on beat detection ⇒ Search for presets by name ⇒ Easily map your own hotkeys ⇒ Mark your favorites with 5 colors of stars ⇒ Create multiple queue windows ⇒ Includes curated library of 1900 presets
This is an utility for batch extraction of individual tracks from .CUE/.WAV audio disk images, which for instance, are created by Exact Audio Copy software.
While PC users still have other methods of playing tracks from CUE files (by e.g. using Foobar2000, or mounting the image via Daemon Tools), Mac OS X users’ choice is limited, so therefore this utility was written.
The utility is built using Trolltech/Nokia Qt, and those, who would like to rebuild it from the source code – will require this library.
This software is in a public domain and thus can be used or modified for any purpose.
Filtron is a 12dB state variable filter that can smoothly transition between lowpass, bandpass, and highpass. It is capable of self-oscillation with resonance levels that can reach up to 11! Filtron also features a fat sounding internal saturation algorithm and a sizzly post overdrive with two modes to choose from: cold and hot.
12db state variable filter
Transition smoothly between Lowpass, Bandpass, Highpass
RTL Utility is a tool for measuring the Round Trip Latency of your Digital Audio Workstation (DAW) and audio interface. The utility is used for low latency performance testing by system builders, reviewers, device manufacturers and at dawbench.com.
When your DAW sends data to your audio interface for playback, it doesn’t send a continuous stream of data one bit at a time. What it does is fill up a section of RAM called a buffer and sends that in a single message when it is ready. Before sending the next message it has to fill the buffer again. This wait time introduces a latency, or delay, between something happening in your DAW and when you actually hear it.
While you are recording, the audio interface buffers and sends data to your DAW in a similar fashion. This introduces latency into your recordings.
If you send a signal from your DAW, out through the audio interface and back in via a loopback patch, then there will be a round trip latency which is the sum of the output and input delays. This is the RTL.
deej is an open-source hardware volume mixer for Windows and Linux PCs. It lets you use real-life sliders (like a DJ!) to seamlessly control the volumes of different apps (such as your music player, the game you’re playing and your voice chat session) without having to stop what you’re doing.
J-Scope is a VST oscilloscope plugin, which can prove invaluable to anyone who develops audio software and has a need to diagnose problems or visualise waveforms.
In operation it is very similar to a real oscilloscope, and most controls will be familiar to anybody who has used a hardware ‘scope. The addition of a control for phosphor decay time allows the examination of rapidly changing waveforms as well as slowly evolving sound envelopes.
J-Scope accepts a stereo signal, and can display it in several modes: