Audio nodes packaged up for contructing spatial audio environments
Positional Audio Component for Croquet Worldcore
Positional audio implementation for WebVR / WebXR applications
Use positional audio in your voxel.js game
CSS selector engine supporting jQuery selectors
Positional audio implementation for WebVR / WebXR applications
unist utility to get the position of a node
AudioBuffer ponyfill with operations toolkit
3D positional audio with HRTF and room acoustics for HoloScript VR/AR
unist utility to serialize a node, position, or point as a human readable location
hast utility to reparse a tree
Polyfill of future proposal for `util.parseArgs()`
rehype plugin to reparse the tree (and raw nodes)
OpenApi TypeScript client generator
A cross-browser wrapper for the Web Audio API which aims to closely follow the standard.
A custom element for the Spotify player with an API that aims to match the `<audio>` API
Decode audio data in node or browser
Javascript audio library for the modern web.
Ember DOM reference modifiers, helpers and decorators
The AudioWorkletProcessor which is used by the recorder-audio-worklet package.
This module provides a loader for the RecorderAudioWorkletProcessor and the corresponding RecorderAudioWorkletNode.
JavaScript HLS client using MediaSourceExtension
Web Assembly streaming Opus decoder with Machine Learning enhancements
<div align="center"> <img width="200" height="200" src="https://s3.amazonaws.com/pix.iemoji.com/images/emoji/apple/ios-11/256/crayon.png"> <h1>@jimp/plugin-dither</h1> <p>Apply a dither effect to an image.</p> </div>
Ruby code for encoding, decoding, and processing positional audio. This code accompanies my educational video series about sound.
Trim an audio or video file using ffmpeg - Works with all formats supported by ffmpeg, including mp3, mp4, mkv, and many more. - Seeks to the nearest frame positions by re-encoding the media. - Reduces file size procduced by OBS Studio by over 80 percent. - Can be used as a Ruby gem. - Installs the 'trim' command. When run as a command, output files are named by adding a 'trim.' prefix to the media file name, e.g. 'dir/trim.file.ext'. By default, the trim command does not overwrite pre-existing output files. When trimming is complete, the trim command displays the trimmed file, unless the -q option is specified Command-line Usage: trim [OPTIONS] dir/file.ext start [[to|for] end] - The start and end timecodes have the format [HH:[MM:]]SS[.XXX] Note that decimal seconds may be specified, bug frames may not; this is consistent with how ffmpeg parses timecodes. - end defaults to end of the audio/video file OPTIONS are: -d Enable debug output. -f Overwrite output file if present. -h Display help information. -v Verbose output. -V Do not @view the trimmed file when complete. Examples: # Crop dir/file.mp4 from 15.0 seconds to the end of the video, save to demo/trim.demo.mp4: trim demo/demo.mp4 15 # Crop dir/file.mkv from 3 minutes, 25 seconds to 9 minutes, 35 seconds, save to demo/trim.demo.mp4: trim demo/demo.mp4 3:25 9:35 # Same as the previous example, using optional 'to' syntax: trim demo/demo.mp4 3:25 to 9:35 # Save as the previous example, but specify the duration instead of the end time by using the for keyword: trim demo/demo.mp4 3:25 for 6:10
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