On Mon, May 21, 2012 at 6:07 AM, Alexandre Prokoudine <alexandre.prokoudine@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Please no. Unless they have had a giant jump up in quality in recent months, this just doesn't cut it.
http://wiki.audacityteam.org/index.php?title=Noise_Removal
Please no. Unless they have had a giant jump up in quality in recent months, this just doesn't cut it.
Tools on linux are audacity or gnome wave cleaner (http://gwc.sourceforge.net/) - or you can also try our new noise reduction algorithms with auphonic:
http://auphonic.com/blog/2012/05/11/experimental-noise-reduction-and-algorithm-chooser/
GWC last I checked hadn't been developed in some time. Hadn't heard of auphonic, will have to take a look right now.
Others have given good comments as chances are for traffic noise which can be variable can be difficult to filter out of a recording. Note that I didn't say remove, or even denoise, as neither of those are accurate and you will never end up with an identical quality recording as if it wasn't there, or really even close in many cases.
Personally at the moment I am using Festige combined with WaveARTs MR Noise for realtime noise reduction on Linux. This was extensively used on the recent video that was part of the Tube Kickstarter campaign (ABout 16 instances of thise IIRC combined with other tools that were suggested elsewhere in this thread). But Ricardus is completely correct, I have yet to find quality noise reduction tools on Linux. I do need to check out the aforementioned auphonic however, hadn't heard that.
Seablade
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