Has anyone seen any code for authoring mp3's?
Thanks in advance, Derek
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Derek Brans wrote:
Has anyone seen any code for authoring mp3's?
I think John M McIntosh johnmci@smalltalkconsulting.com did some work on this. But the lisencing issue was a bit complicated.
Karl
On Saturday 07 December 2002 9:25 am, Karl Ramberg wrote:
Derek Brans wrote:
Has anyone seen any code for authoring mp3's?
I think John M McIntosh johnmci@smalltalkconsulting.com did some work on this. But the lisencing issue was a bit complicated.
Ogg Vorbis would be in most respects a better way to attack the issue (the external libraries are available for just about every platform) -- I'm convinced that it's both technically and audibly superior -- but raises (as the "GPL is evil" lobby will point out) other potential licencing issues.
And, of course, the dunderheads who produce discrete Mp3 players all seem hell bent on changing down a blind alley........
Cheers
John
On Sat, Dec 07, 2002 at 05:11:39PM +0000, John Hinsley wrote:
On Saturday 07 December 2002 9:25 am, Karl Ramberg wrote:
Derek Brans wrote:
Has anyone seen any code for authoring mp3's?
I think John M McIntosh johnmci@smalltalkconsulting.com did some work on this. But the lisencing issue was a bit complicated.
Ogg Vorbis would be in most respects a better way to attack the issue (the external libraries are available for just about every platform) -- I'm convinced that it's both technically and audibly superior -- but raises (as the "GPL is evil" lobby will point out) other potential licencing issues.
The Ogg-Libraries are under a BSD license:
What licensing applies to the included Ogg Vorbis software?
The bundled Ogg Vorbis utility software is released under the terms of the GNU GPL, or GNU General Public License. The details can be found at www.gnu.org.
The libraries and SDKs are released under the more business-friendly BSD license. Please note that developers are still free to use the specification to independently write closed-source implementations of Ogg Vorbis which are not bound by these licenses.
see http://www.vorbis.com/faq.psp
Marcus
On Saturday 07 December 2002 5:22 pm, Marcus Denker wrote:
On Sat, Dec 07, 2002 at 05:11:39PM +0000, John Hinsley wrote:
Ogg Vorbis would be in most respects a better way to attack the issue (the external libraries are available for just about every platform) -- I'm convinced that it's both technically and audibly superior -- but raises (as the "GPL is evil" lobby will point out) other potential licencing issues.
The Ogg-Libraries are under a BSD license:
What licensing applies to the included Ogg Vorbis software?
The bundled Ogg Vorbis utility software is released under the terms of the GNU GPL, or GNU General Public License. The details can be found at www.gnu.org.
The libraries and SDKs are released under the more business-friendly BSD license. Please note that developers are still free to use the specification to independently write closed-source implementations of Ogg Vorbis which are not bound by these licenses.
I stand corrected: Ogg is the way to go!
Cheers
John
I'm currently actively working on Ogg Vorbis support for squeak. I've gotten the vorbis libraries to compile under the Win32 Squeak compile environment and now just need to write some slang to get the two to talk (I'm going the plugin route rather than the FFI route). I'm planning only on decode support for starters (since that's all I need for my jukebox anyway), but it wouldn't be difficult to add encoding support as well. I'll let everyone know when I have anything that's even alpha quality.
John Hinsley wrote:
On Saturday 07 December 2002 9:25 am, Karl Ramberg wrote:
Derek Brans wrote:
Has anyone seen any code for authoring mp3's?
I think John M McIntosh johnmci@smalltalkconsulting.com did some work on this. But the lisencing issue was a bit complicated.
Ogg Vorbis would be in most respects a better way to attack the issue (the external libraries are available for just about every platform) -- I'm convinced that it's both technically and audibly superior -- but raises (as the "GPL is evil" lobby will point out) other potential licencing issues.
And, of course, the dunderheads who produce discrete Mp3 players all seem hell bent on changing down a blind alley........
Cheers
John
Yay! Sounds terrific.
Keep us posted.
Cheers,
Alan
------
At 9:53 AM -0500 12/9/02, Jason Dufair wrote:
I'm currently actively working on Ogg Vorbis support for squeak. I've gotten the vorbis libraries to compile under the Win32 Squeak compile environment and now just need to write some slang to get the two to talk (I'm going the plugin route rather than the FFI route). I'm planning only on decode support for starters (since that's all I need for my jukebox anyway), but it wouldn't be difficult to add encoding support as well. I'll let everyone know when I have anything that's even alpha quality.
John Hinsley wrote:
On Saturday 07 December 2002 9:25 am, Karl Ramberg wrote:
Derek Brans wrote:
Has anyone seen any code for authoring mp3's?
I think John M McIntosh johnmci@smalltalkconsulting.com did some work on this. But the lisencing issue was a bit complicated.
Ogg Vorbis would be in most respects a better way to attack the issue (the external libraries are available for just about every platform) -- I'm convinced that it's both technically and audibly superior -- but raises (as the "GPL is evil" lobby will point out) other potential licencing issues. And, of course, the dunderheads who produce discrete Mp3 players all seem hell bent on changing down a blind alley........
Cheers
John
-- Jason Dufair - jase@dufair.org http://www.dufair.org/ "I never forget a face, but in your case I'll be glad to make an exception." --Groucho Marx
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