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2017-09-04Update some URLs.wiz1-2/+2
2015-11-03Add SHA512 digests for distfiles for audio categoryagc1-1/+2
Problems found with existing distfiles: /pub/pkgsrc/distfiles/amp-0.7.6.tgz /pub/pkgsrc/distfiles/freeswitch/freeswitch-sounds-music-32000-1.0.8.tar.gz /pub/pkgsrc/distfiles/freeswitch/freeswitch-sounds-music-48000-1.0.8.tar.gz /pub/pkgsrc/distfiles/freeswitch/freeswitch-sounds-en-us-callie-32000-1.0.22.tar.gz /pub/pkgsrc/distfiles/freeswitch/freeswitch-sounds-en-us-callie-48000-1.0.22.tar.gz /pub/pkgsrc/distfiles/freeswitch/freeswitch-sounds-fr-ca-june-32000-1.0.18.tar.gz /pub/pkgsrc/distfiles/freeswitch/freeswitch-sounds-fr-ca-june-48000-1.0.18.tar.gz /pub/pkgsrc/distfiles/freeswitch/freeswitch-sounds-ru-RU-elena-16000-1.0.12.tar.gz /pub/pkgsrc/distfiles/freeswitch/freeswitch-sounds-ru-RU-elena-32000-1.0.12.tar.gz /pub/pkgsrc/distfiles/freeswitch/freeswitch-sounds-ru-RU-elena-48000-1.0.12.tar.gz /pub/pkgsrc/distfiles/freeswitch/freeswitch-sounds-ru-RU-elena-8000-1.0.12.tar.gz /pub/pkgsrc/distfiles/freeswitch/freeswitch-sounds-fr-ca-june-32000-1.0.18.tar.gz /pub/pkgsrc/distfiles/freeswitch/freeswitch-sounds-fr-ca-june-48000-1.0.18.tar.gz /pub/pkgsrc/distfiles/freeswitch/freeswitch-sounds-ru-RU-elena-32000-1.0.13.tar.gz /pub/pkgsrc/distfiles/freeswitch/freeswitch-sounds-ru-RU-elena-48000-1.0.13.tar.gz /pub/pkgsrc/distfiles/kid3-3.3.0.tar.gz /pub/pkgsrc/distfiles/libdca-0.0.5.tar.bz2 /pub/pkgsrc/distfiles/mp3to.gz /pub/pkgsrc/distfiles/squeezeboxserver-7.5.1-noCPAN.tgz No changes made to these file. Otherwise, existing SHA1 digests verified and found to be the same on the machine holding the existing distfiles (morden). All existing SHA1 digests retained for now as an audit trail.
2014-08-07Import spectro-edit-0.4 as audio/spectro-edit.wiz4-0/+53
Spectro-Edit reads in regular PCM audio files (currently, only 16-bit mono WAV is supported), then shows you the audio visually in a time vs. frequency plot. The fun part is, you can "paint out" any part of the visualization and play back the audio subject to your modifications. When you are happy with the result, you can save your work back to a WAV file. This could be useful for podcasting (edit out microphone noise, chair squeaks, phones ringing, and other background noise), music (make strange and unusual modifications to the sound for artistic reasons), research (visualize animal calls or noise pollution from nearby industrial activity), and general purpose geekery (which is why I made it).