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  2. Fade (audio engineering) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fade_(audio_engineering)

    Possibly the earliest example of a fade-out ending can be heard in Joseph Haydn's Symphony No. 45, nicknamed the "Farewell" Symphony on account of the fade-out ending.The symphony which was written in 1772 used this device as a way of courteously asking Haydn's patron Prince Nikolaus Esterházy, to whom the symphony was dedicated, to allow the musicians to return home after a longer than ...

  3. How To Ace The 10-Minute Interview - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2012-12-28-how-to-ace-the-10...

    According to a survey from Robert Half, it may be 10 minutes or less. Sixty percent of human-resources managers polled say they form a positive or negative opinion of candidates within 10 minutes ...

  4. Sound bite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_bite

    A sound bite or soundbite [1] [2] is a short clip of speech or music extracted from a longer piece of audio, often used to promote or exemplify the full length piece. In the context of journalism, a sound bite is characterized by a short phrase or sentence that captures the essence of what the speaker was trying to say, and is used to summarize information and entice the reader or viewer.

  5. Audio-to-video synchronization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio-to-video_synchronization

    Presentation time stamps (PTS) are embedded in MPEG transport streams to precisely signal when each audio and video segment is to be presented and avoid AV-sync errors. . However, these timestamps are often added after the video undergoes frame synchronization, format conversion and preprocessing, and thus the lip sync errors created by these operations will not be corrected by the addition ...

  6. Sound on tape - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_on_tape

    SOT is an acronym for the phrase sound on tape.It refers to any audio recorded on analog or digital video formats. It is used in scriptwriting for television productions and filmmaking to indicate the portions of the production that will use room tone or other audio from the time of recording, as opposed to audio recorded later (studio voice-over, Foley, etc.).

  7. Auto-Play - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auto-Play

    Auto-Play is a feature used by some websites containing at least one embedded video or audio element wherein the video or audio element starts playing, automatically, without explicit user choice, after some triggering event such as page load or navigating to a particular region of the webpage.

  8. Teleprompter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teleprompter

    The script, in inch-high letters, was printed by a special electric typewriter on a paper scroll, which was advanced as the performer read, and the machines rented for the then-considerable sum of $30 per hour. [7] The teleprompter was used for the first time on December 4, 1950, in filming the CBS soap The First Hundred Years. [8]

  9. Audio mining - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio_mining

    Audio mining is a technique by which the content of an audio signal can be automatically analyzed and searched. It is most commonly used in the field of automatic speech recognition , where the analysis tries to identify any speech within the audio.