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  2. Snack Sound Toolkit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snack_Sound_Toolkit

    The Snack Sound Toolkit is a cross-platform library written by Kåre Sjölander of the Swedish Royal Technical University (KTH) with bindings for the scripting languages Tcl, Python, and Ruby. It provides audio I/O, audio analysis and processing functions, such as spectral analysis , pitch tracking , and filtering , and related graphics ...

  3. SoX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SoX

    Sound eXchange (SoX) is a cross-platform audio editing software. It has a command-line interface , and is written in standard C . It is free software , licensed under GPL-2.0-or-later , with libsox licensed under LGPL-2.1-or-later , and distributed by Chris Bagwell through SourceForge .

  4. Help:Sound file markup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Sound_file_markup

    To link to a description page, put a colon before the prefix. [[:File:Example.ogg]] File:Example.ogg. You can also link directly to the file using "Media:" instead of "File:". This method must not be used solely for a file under a license which requires attribution, such as CC-BY licenses. [[Media:Example.ogg]] Media:Example.ogg

  5. HTTP Live Streaming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP_Live_Streaming

    HTTP Live Streaming (also known as HLS) is an HTTP-based adaptive bitrate streaming communications protocol developed by Apple Inc. and released in 2009. Support for the protocol is widespread in media players, web browsers, mobile devices, and streaming media servers.

  6. HTML audio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTML_audio

    The <audio> element represents a sound, or an audio stream. It is commonly used to play back a single audio file within a web page, showing a GUI widget with play/pause/volume controls. It is commonly used to play back a single audio file within a web page, showing a GUI widget with play/pause/volume controls.

  7. Pygame - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pygame

    Pygame was originally written by Pete Shinners to replace PySDL after its development stalled. [2] [8] It has been a community project since 2000 [9] and is released under the free software GNU Lesser General Public License [5] (which "provides for Pygame to be distributed with open source and commercial software" [10]).

  8. Real-Time Messaging Protocol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Real-time_Messaging_Protocol

    For example, there is a channel for handling RPC requests and responses, a channel for video stream data, a channel for audio stream data, a channel for out-of-band control messages (fragment size negotiation, etc.), and so on. During a typical RTMP session, several channels may be active simultaneously at any given time.

  9. Beautiful Soup (HTML parser) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beautiful_Soup_(HTML_parser)

    [citation needed] It takes its name from the poem Beautiful Soup from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland [5] and is a reference to the term "tag soup" meaning poorly-structured HTML code. [6] Richardson continues to contribute to the project, [ 7 ] which is additionally supported by paid open-source maintainers from the company Tidelift.