On Monday 11 June 2007, Pau Arumi wrote: > CLAM 1.1, The `More eye-candy, please' release. > > After a very intense development months since the last 1.0 release, > the CLAM crew is glad to announce that CLAM 1.1 is ready to > [1]download. It comes with many new features and code clean up. > Most > important improvements are found in the Visual Prototyping > front: new > 3D-looking widgets, new data viewers and control surface; and a > simplified way to bind controls between the user interface and the > processing network. > > To learn about CLAM: http://clam.iua.upf.edu > > This release has been cooked-up under the umbrella of the > Interactive > Technology Group at the UPF lead by Josep Blat. So we thank their > support! It also features the work from contributors such as Zach > Welch; as well as the first patches from [2]Google Summer of Code > program --for example LADSPA and FAUST support and some work on > Annotator widgets. > > A summarized list of changes follows. See also the [3]CHANGES files > for details. New audio related widgets were added to be used on the > NetworkEditor and the Prototyper. Such widgets include data > views such > as the BarGraph which can display LPC's, MFCC's. Nice control > widgets > were also added. The ControlSurface, for instance, to control two > scalar parameters by moving a point. Some widgets were gathered > from > the LAC community, such as [4]PkSampler [5]PovRay generated > widgets, > and nice knobs we enhanced from [6]QSynth and [7]Rosegarden. > Thanks to > the developers of those projects for making them GPL and being so > supportive while integrating them in CLAM. With all those widgets, > users now can visually build more appealing applications such > as the > new examples we include with Prototyper: A real-time gender > change, or > real-time spectral effects. > > The TonalAnalysis (Chord extraction) now takes advantage of fftw3 > performing 4 times faster! The KeySpace visualization was also > optimized so now tonal analysis runs even on very slow computers. > > NetworkEditor and Prototyper usability have been enhanced. They > exploit the new in-control bounds parameters to automatically > set up > bounded control senders widgets. Also, NetworkEditor have proper > multi-processing selection features. > > On different fronts, the code-base has been reduced by getting > rid of > Fltk and Qt3 modules since we are now focusing on Qt4, and the > documentation have been restructured and now it offers new > programming > how-tos. > > The CLAM team > > > References > > 1. http://clam.iua.upf.edu/download.html > 2. http://clam.iua.upf.edu/wikis/clam/index.php/GSoC_2007 > 3. http://clam.iua.upf.edu/doc.html#changes > 4. http://www.patrickkidd.com/ > 5. http://www.povray.org/ > 6. http://qsynth.sourceforge.net/ > 7. http://www.rosegardenmusic.com/ > _______________________________________________ > Linux-audio-user mailing list > Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/linux-audio-user Looks quite impressive. Anyone have a tat-for-tat comparison with Juce? _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/linux-audio-user