From: Chris Bier (chris.bier@cymor.com)
Date: 08/14/02


Subject: RE: Linux Jukebox
From: Chris Bier <chris.bier@cymor.com>
Date: Wed, 14 Aug 2002 20:54:54 -0500
Message-Id: <1029377340.5693.6.camel@bach-5>

There's a nice program called normalize.
http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~cvaill/normalize/

On Wed, 2002-08-14 at 19:13, Jonathan Hutchins wrote:
> >
> >
> >Subject: RE: Linux Jukebox
> >Date: Thu, 1 Aug 2002 08:59:31 -0500
> >Message-ID:
<FEDF8BF5FC2C7B47943BE6638462E8A11DB4B3@kcexch1.celeritas.com>
> >From: "Becker, Rob" <Becker@celeritas.com
<mailto:Becker@celeritas.com?subject=RE:%20Linux%20Jukebox&replyto=FEDF8BF5FC2C7B47943BE6638462E8A11DB4B3@kcexch1.celeritas.com>>
> >
> >
> >
> > If I may suggest and intermediate step to your ripping process, I
> > would rip the wav files from the cd's, perform volume normalization
on
> > them, then encode them in whatever format you prefer (I would
suggest
> > ogg vorbis, learn more here www.vorbis.com ) I have a similar
project
> > mostly completed and I've found that just encoding cd's with no
> > normalization results in music that can drastically fluxuate in
> > volume. In my car, this is very troublesome, as it leaves me
fiddling
> > with the volume from song to song.
>
>
> So what program would you use for normalising the files? I notice
that
> grip has the ability to insert a filtering step.
>
>
>
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