Greetings: Regarding denoising and vinyl/tape restoration: http://gwc.sourceforge.net/ http://panic.et.tudelft.nl/~costar/gramofile/ http://home.snafu.de/wahlm/dl8hbs/declick.html http://www.sci.fi/~mjkoskin/ http://www.tappin.me.uk/Linux/audio.html Csound also includes denoising software. Snd can probably be used for the job, particularly with its excellent frequency-domain displays, but for the fine-detail work you might want to use Ceres. Kjetil's latest versions include zooming capabilities along with Ceres's other excellent display and editing options Best regards, == Dave Phillips The Book Of Linux Music & Sound at http://www.nostarch.com/lms.htm The Linux Soundapps Site at http://linux-sound.org Rick Taylor wrote: > > On Mon, 2003-02-17 at 10:52, Alexandre Prokoudine wrote: > > On 17 Feb 2003 10:22:25 -0600 > > Rick Taylor <ricktaylor@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > I do know that if there were ports of d/noise {thats with a /} or > > > in-tune {with a - {I think. ...it looks as though they got run out > > > of business despite the fact that they made one of my favorite > > > sound sculpting tools. {Symphonic pieces in one pass from common > > > household white noise... you just can't beat it.}}} that life in > > > linux would be much, much easier. > > > > > > What are you wanting to restore? > > > > e.g. vinyl and old tapes recordings > > There's a ton of stuff in windows and mac. Cool edit has great noise > stuff for one thing. D/Noise is pretty easy though I've not exactly used > it for its intended purpose... > > It's a real boon that audacity has it {noise reduction} on linux... > other than that maybe you could use something like Ceres or an audio > synth package with enough options to be practical for that sort of > thing? Maybe go with some high priced unix/hardware solution? > > Personally, I'm thinking snd has major potential for that sort of > thing... It's extensible enough at any rate. :} > > -- > Rick Taylor <ricktaylor@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > The Dispossessed --