Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Personally, I cannot see evidence of any compression in the .gif
file. Neither can I. That's why I asked "not just limited???" My bad. When I looked at the file I did not think about what you had actually done, adn as I did like the way it switched pictures continuously I didn't compare the pictures as much as I would have done if it had kep still. To my glance it looked like you might have used a very slight compression to get rid of the highest peaks and then turned the gain up a bit, while in reality you had turned the gain up a bit with limiting applied to avoid digital clipping. The point of uploading the image though was to debunk the baseless claims that I am "severely dicking with the music" by doing this to my I think that some of that misunderstanding could have been prevented if you had not just said that you were batch normalizing all the tracks from a CD. It actually took a while for you to explain what *you* meant by "batch" in this case. Normally batch whatever simply means that you've told the machine to do whatever and then left it to do that instead of interactively telling it to do the different steps requiered for whatever. With most applications, batch normalizing would simply mean that the application normalizes a whole bunch of files, one file at a time, in one batch. It does not mean that the app first analyzes the whole batch of files and then applies the same change to the whole batch, wich is what you seem to mean. Regards /Jonas |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Louder IS Better (With Lossy) | Pro Audio | |||
Louder IS Better (With Lossy) | Pro Audio | |||
Louder IS Better (With Lossy) | Pro Audio | |||
Louder IS Better (With Lossy) | Pro Audio | |||
Louder IS Better (With Lossy) | Pro Audio |