Public Domain Sound Archives?
Booker asks: "Are there any public domain repositories for sounds? Sort of like Propaganda for your speakers? Audio cues can really enhance a desktop design, but most of what is currently out there consists of a small number of bleeps, bloops, and buzzes. Of the window managers / desktops which do ship some default sounds (E, gnome, KDE...), where did those come from? If someone were to start such a repository, what should the file format be?"
Q. Can I use the samples on my recordings?
A. Of course! All of SampleNet's samples are copyright free.
WWW interface here, also available via ftp. I managed to nab the entire archive and burn it to two CD's for convenience... Baz
Isn't that sort of like saying "how can a loosely knit band of hackers with no central authority produce quality software?" :)
I see what you mean, though... there would probably be a lot of crap. And a lot of copyright infringing stuff. (It is hard to resist putting in some H.A.L. samples, for example...)
As far as quality goes, though, if it was generated from a synthesizer, rather than an analog recording, the quality would be good... most sound effects I've heard for window managers seem to be synthesized sounds.
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pub domain sound archives could be useful for much more than desktop noises, though that's a perfectly good use:)
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... seems trivial or silly maybe, but I am a sound enthusiast, so I really like that idea. Not that you could really tell fine distinctions on a cassette, though;)
.45 autopistol fires three times"
...
I'd like to see (and there may actually be, but I'm not familiar with any) a site dedicated to preserving the audio information that defines our culture, and the world
I remember reading about some guy who was part of an international tape-swapping club who recorded the sounds of various New Zealand rivers
I sometimes like to walk around with my Sony recorder just listening to things, then playing it back and recalling the visual info along with the audio.
Format? I agree with the poster who said that AIFF was smart, since it is high quality and can be encoded easily, but it seems to me like a more intelligent approach would be to have some high-quality standard for the sounds available whenever possible, but also compressed versions, so visitors can have a choice between file sizes:
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SOUNDFILE "Gunshot: Springfield
455509987as - 16-bit AIFF stereo
455509987bs - MP3 (256) stereo
455509987cm - MP3 (128) mono
455509987dm - 8-bit mono
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So long as there is a high-quality original always available to those who want to do their own tweaking, it would seem nice to have a script generate a range of other sizes, to minimize bandwidth requirements for the folks on both ends.
Also, what I'd like to see in such a sound archive is detailed info on the source and circumstances of the recording.
Just a small textfile would be plenty
timothy
jrnl: http://tinyurl.com/c2l8yr / foes: http://tinyurl.com/ckjno5
Use WAV (actually I think I mean AIFF, but you know what I mean). Why? Because (assuming you make these things really totally copyright free [which is the right choice for something like this IMHO]), people can use sox or bladeenc or whatever to convert them to the formats they want. WAV is kind of big, but I think for the kind of sounds you're thinking of [small stuff 10 seconds long], that would be OK.
/usr/share/sndconfig/sample.au, but I didn't think of that at the time).
Make sure you include the clip of Linus used in sndconfig (at least on Redhat it is). It's not very clear though: took me about 10 tries before I finally figured out what it was. Yes, I reran sndconfig, even though my sound card was working fine, because I wanted to hear the test sound. Sad, huh? (Yeah I could just play