Sponsored Content
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Post a Cool Music Video (Part I) Post 302158725 by vino on Wednesday 16th of January 2008 06:32:39 AM
Old 01-16-2008
Ennio Morricone - The Ecstasy of Gold (live in concert)
[youtube=uk]qQ3u3fTG70Q[/youtube]
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. What is on Your Mind?

Cool YouTube Video: Here Comes Another Bubble - The Richter Scales!

You will like this :) fi4fzvQ6I-o (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
2 Replies

2. What is on Your Mind?

Post a Cool Music Video (Part II)

This thread is a continuation of Post a Cool Music Video (Part I). See How to use YouTube tags for instructions on how to post a video from YouTube. And I will start things off with.... Throwing Fire At The Sun by Heather Nova QXq44BPL-wo (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: Perderabo
11 Replies

3. What is on Your Mind?

Post a Cool Music Video (Part III)

This thread is a continuation of Post a Cool Music Video (Part I). See How to use YouTube tags for instructions on how to post a video from YouTube. And I will start things off with.... Operator by Jim Croce A2iS8XctJKo (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: Perderabo
9 Replies

4. What is on Your Mind?

Cool video

Grand Central Big Freeze jwMj3PJDxuo It looks as tho it's movie scene from M. Night Shyamalan :b: (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: sparcguy
0 Replies

5. What is on Your Mind?

Post a Cool Music Video (Part IV)

This thread is a continuation of Post a Cool Music Video (Part I). See How to use YouTube tags for instructions on how to post a video from YouTube. And I will start things off with.... Beyond The Invisible by Enigma hx2jrunyGjE (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: Perderabo
16 Replies

6. What is on Your Mind?

Post a Cool Music Video (Part V)

This thread is a continuation of Post a Cool Music Video (Part I). See How to use YouTube tags for instructions on how to post a video from YouTube. And I will start things off with.... Octavarium by Dream Theater xK3qylwd-M0 (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: Perderabo
9 Replies

7. What is on Your Mind?

Post a Cool Music Video (Part VII)

We post videos by linking them in from youtube. Videos from other sites are not absolutely forbidden, but we know that youtube won't tolerate videos that we won't tolerate. We have instructions on how to post youtube videos: How to use youtube tags. Please follow the format in those instructions to... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: zxmaus
11 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Creating Music Video

i'm flex developer and i'm not familiar with this world. i need to make out of mp3, bitmaps , flv, text a music clip. can i do it with shell? can i use some video editing program on the server ? thanks in advance. (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: sigalmaria
0 Replies

9. What is on Your Mind?

Post a Cool Music Video (Part VI)

A few years ago we had a series of threads where we posted music videos. Let's try another one and see what happens. :) We post videos by linking them in from youtube. Videos from other sites are not absolutely forbidden, but we know that youtube won't tolerate videos that we won't... (18 Replies)
Discussion started by: Perderabo
18 Replies

10. What is on Your Mind?

Post a Cool Music Video (Part VIII)

We've all heard this, right? 9bZkp7q19f0 Post some cool music...! You may want to review the earlier threads:Part I Part II Part III Part IV Part V Part VI Part VII (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Scott
3 Replies
qwavfade(1)							 quelcom man pages						       qwavfade(1)

NAME
qwavfade - fade in/out wav files SYNOPSIS
qwavfade [option]... file... DESCRIPTION
qwavfade modifies a wav file applying on it a fade in or a fade out or both. a fade consists in modifying progressively the level of the wav as if you were slowly increasing or decreasing the volume. a fade in con- sists in increasing the volume starting from a low level at the beginning of the wav. a fade out consists in decreasing the volume to a low level at the end of the wav. OPTIONS
-d <duration>[<format>], --duration=<duration>[<format>] duration is a positive integer that specifies the duration of the fade. the value is treated as a sample number unless a format specifier is used. see the FORMATS section below for information. the default value is five seconds. this option overrides the --length option explained below. -h, --help show a brief help and exit. -i, --in just fade in. don't fade out. by default, fade in and fade out. -l <time point>, --length=<time point> time point specifies the length(=duration) of the fade. see the TIME POINTS section below for information. this option is quite sim- ilar to the --duration option above. its easier to use though not as powerful than the previous one. the default value is five sec- onds. this option overrides the --duration option explained above. -o, --out just fade out. don't fade in. by default, fade in and fade out. -t, --test this option can be used to create and fade a tests files instead of modifying to original file. a test file will be created for each type of selected fade (in or out). the name of the test file will be fadein.<file> or fadeout.<file. the duration of the test files is the fade duration plus two seconds. -v, --verbose show more detailed info. -V, --version show version and exit. TIME POINTS
the time points is a easier way to specify the length (or duration) of a fade with a millisecond resolution. here's its formal form: [h:[m:]]s[.ms] where h value is a positive integer meaning hours. m value is a positive integer meaning minutes. s value is a positive integer meaning seconds. ms value is a positive integer meaning milliseconds. only the seconds specifier is required. here are a couple of examples: 1:23:45.67 2:0.001 FORMATS
the --duration option can have also an optional modifier. if this modifier is not used, then the value provided with the corresponding cut option will be interpreted as a number of samples. since most of the times will be difficult to specify a duration in terms of samples, the following modifiers are provided: j value is interpreted as milliseconds. m value is interpreted as minutes. s value is interpreted as seconds. b value is interpreted as bytes. k value is interpreted as kbytes (1024 bytes). M value is interpreted as megabytes (1024 kbytes). in either case, the values specified will be rounded to get an integer number of samples. EXAMPLE
suppose you want to fade in and out the fantastic song live.in.concert.wav using a fade duration of 5 seconds: first we are going to test: qwavfade -t -d 7s live.in.concert.wav hear the test fades: my-favourite-wav-player fadein.live.in.concert.wav my-favourite-wav-player fadeout.live.in.concert.wav if you want to try with another duration, jump to the first step and change the duration argument. and if you're happy with the tests: qwavfade -d 5s live.in.concert.wav NOTES
qwavfade doesn't allow both types of fades (in and out) to overlap. if you want to fade in and out a wav file, and the two regions to fade overlap, then probably you made a mistake. in any case, you can do it fading separately. BUGS
tests has been done only with 44100 Hz 16 bit stereo files, though it may work with mono/stereo 8/16 bits files. AUTHOR
dmanye@etse.urv.es http://www.etse.urv.es/~dmanye/quelcom/quelcom.html SEE ALSO
qwavinfo(1), qwavjoin(1), qwavcut(1), qwavsilence(1), qwavheaderdump(1) qmp3info(1), qmp3join(1), qmp3cut(1), qmp3check(1), qmp3report(1) quelcom 0.4.0 february 2001 qwavfade(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:51 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy