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  2. Audio time stretching and pitch scaling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio_time_stretching_and...

    These processes are often used to match the pitches and tempos of two pre-recorded clips for mixing when the clips cannot be reperformed or resampled. Time stretching is often used to adjust radio commercials [1] and the audio of television advertisements [2] to fit exactly into the 30 or 60 seconds available. It can be used to conform longer ...

  3. Gapless playback - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gapless_playback

    Gapless playback is the uninterrupted playback of consecutive audio tracks, such that relative time distances in the original audio source are preserved over track boundaries on playback. For this to be useful, other artifacts (than timing-related ones) at track boundaries should not be severed either.

  4. AVS Video Editor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AVS_Video_Editor

    Transitions - help video clips smoothly go into one another, dissolve or overlap two video or image files. [13] Fade in and fade out video and audio files - dissolve a video to and from a blank image, reduce the audio volume at the end of the video and increase at the beginning. Slideshow creation - create a presentation of a series of still ...

  5. Acoustic fingerprint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acoustic_fingerprint

    A robust acoustic fingerprint algorithm must take into account the perceptual characteristics of the audio. If two files sound alike to the human ear, their acoustic fingerprints should match, even if their binary representations are quite different. Acoustic fingerprints are not hash functions, which are sensitive to any small changes in the ...

  6. Overdubbing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overdubbing

    Overdubbing (also known as layering) [1] is a technique used in audio recording in which audio tracks that have been pre-recorded are then played back and monitored, while simultaneously recording new, doubled, or augmented tracks onto one or more available tracks of a digital audio workstation (DAW) or tape recorder. [2]

  7. Opus (audio format) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opus_(audio_format)

    Opus is a lossy audio coding format developed by the Xiph.Org Foundation and standardized by the Internet Engineering Task Force, designed to efficiently code speech and general audio in a single format, while remaining low-latency enough for real-time interactive communication and low-complexity enough for low-end embedded processors.

  8. Singing and Signing: How Music and ASL Live Side by Side in ...

    www.aol.com/entertainment/singing-signing-si-n...

    Writer-director Siân Heder makes it very clear she knew the double meaning of “CODA,” the title of her new Apple TV Plus film, an acronym for Child of Deaf Adults. It’s used to describe the ...

  9. Audio file format - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio_file_format

    Audio file icons of various formats. An audio file format is a file format for storing digital audio data on a computer system. The bit layout of the audio data (excluding metadata) is called the audio coding format and can be uncompressed, or compressed to reduce the file size, often using lossy compression.