The processing is more than noticeable when playing on my PC's speakers. It's very interesting imho. On Saturday 03 January 2004 11:10 pm, davidrclark@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > Greetings Linux Audio Users. > > A few weeks ago, I mailed to the user list a URL regarding some audio > software I have been working on over the past two years. For those > who missed it: > > http://home.earthlink.net/~davidrclark/linux_audio_users/ > > The only response I received was regarding the 3-D audio work I have > been doing (Benji --- Thanks!). It was suggested that I provide a more > comprehensive demo at a higher encoding rate. I have just posted a > demo of three audio clips (in one file) to: > > http://home.earthlink.net/~davidrclark/latest_mp3.html > > The three 30-second audio clips are each repeated twice in the MP3 > file as follows: > > 1) Monophonic, dry recording from Roland XV-3080 > > 2) Performance output from Roland XV-3080, including hall-like reverb, > etc. > > 3) Engulf 3-D Audio processed version of the monophonic, dry > recordings, one track at a time. The tracks are exactly those in #1 > above. > > 4) Repeat of #2, performance output of Roland with reverb, etc. > > 5) Repeat of #1, monophonic, dry. > > 6) Repeat of Engulf 3-D Audio processed version of #1. > > The clips are in this order to ease comparison. The file is a 6.0 MB > 256 KBps encoded MP3 file. The 3-D audio is only noticeable if one > uses headphones, which is what this processing is designed for. > > Is anyone interested in this type of processing? I would think that > many people would be interested due to the popularity of headphones > and stereo earphones these days and the fact that commercial CD's are > horrible to listen to with headphones. > > Thanks for your attention, and regards to all. > > Dave.