83 private links
Voice control: transform various alphabet's and morphemes (graphemes?) into actions on the pc.
Fun demonstration here: https://numenvoice.org/
Can for example translate 'terminate' into closing a window, or 'west' into focusing left tile in a tiling wm, or 'yes' into return on the terminal.
Seems fun for regular use but really useful for those who can not regularly use their hands to type for whatever reason.
Perhaps the best free and opensource audio transcription (and editing) software I have found.
Comes with a huge variety of language models and punctuation additions.
Works offline.
Free.
Good!
Open source transcription software. Does have a SaaS model but can apparently be self-hosted.
Seems really neat - auto-transcribe most of it then put it into different speaker roles and highlight low-confidence words so you can fix them.
TUI Audiobook Player. Contribute to rareitems/gadacz development by creating an account on GitHub.
Featureful ncurses based MPD client inspired by ncmpc with integration for Beets, spectrum visualization,Bandcamp/Soundcloud, asciimatics, cantata, and more - doctorfree/MusicPlayerPlus
Seems like a more featureful alternative to ncmpcpp?
A neovim Plugin for Sonic Pi.
Live audio programming from the best editor! There is also a vimscript version for pure vim (https://github.com/dermusikman/sonicpi.vim).
miti is a musical instrument textual interface. Basically, its MIDI, but with human-readable text.
Program your midi, let your midi program you!
Software modular synth.
Patch a wide variety of sound/effect modules together to create some truly nice sounds.
- everything works through a GUI and has a super large array of possible states.
Collaborative Programmable Music.
Built on clojure and a large library of 'musical functions' (scales, chords and so on). Possibly originally a fork of SuperCollider? Not sure.
EDIT: Nevermind, it uses SuperCollider under the hood but puts the clojure dialect on top. Interesting!
Have not tried it, does not provide a webIDE but seems very powerful.
A weird audio programming language, more esoteric than aimed to be easily digestible afaik.
Written in 2 dimensions and using individual lower-/upper-case letters to program live it creates - interesting sounds.
Would defer to other languages for bigger sound creation projects but it is very interesting.
GitHub - grame-cncm/faust: Functional programming language for signal processing and sound synthesis
Functional audio programming language.
Non-lispy (thus different to Nyquist lang) but still (purely?) functional.
Have not tried it too much but comes with a webIDE like most other audio programming languages and a nice array of examples.
An (older?) audio programming langauge ("sound synthesis and composition").
I'm not very familiar with this one but it is a LISP dialect, so presumably much nicer for those lispy functional types.
ChucK Music Programming Language - audio programming,
a little older and a little more 'stale' documentation (being on a princeton edu html-only page) but it seems a really nice eco system.
Comes with a webIDE and can take many plugins (or, chugins).
An audio server, programming language, and IDE for sound synthesis and algorithmic composition - split into the three separate components.
More complicated (but perhaps more flexible) than e.g. sonic-pi.
Code. Music. Live.
Simple live audio coding language, made originally for the raspberry.
Basically a wrapper around the ffmpeg conversion functionality.
Takes care of some things like entering metadata, can optionally receive an audible authcode, and provides some convenience. I would nevertheless suggest directly using ffmpeg itself and grabbing the authcode from one of your files directly.
Flac splitting guide using cuetools (and shntool). Works wonderfully and easy to split, or convert, and tag with two commands.
A concise explanation of volume controls (digital and analogue) and where to put which volume to get the best sound quality/usability.
Pretty low-latency (~200ms on my WiFi), decent quality, simple setup (once everything is compiled if not on Arch), really nice toolset!
Runs through pipewire, pulseaudio, alsa, take your pick.
Wayland screen recording from the command line! Simple, efficient, works. For audio and video.