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Robin's Latest Site

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Robin is freelancing in audio/video post-production and hardware/software co-development, living the FLOSS spirit as root@linuxaudio.org, focusing on Research & Development for installation-art, life and open-web standards: Amongst others Robin a.k.a. x42 contributes to oauth.net, openmovieeditor.org, ardour.org, PAM, greenpeace.nl, Xjadeo, 64 Studio, sourcefabric,…

Currently Robin is engineering and teaching Media-Art at the University of Paris, France and co-organizes the Linux Audio Conference.


roB.log

'sup Doc?

It's been a long time coming,…

I have recently defended my doctoral Dissertation (PDF) on The Ardour DAW – Latency Compensation and Anywhere-to-Anywhere Signal Routing Systems at the University Paris 8.

Many thanks for everyone who helped make this happen, friends close and far and all the wonderful people who joined me during various periods along the road in the last 5 years. It's been quite a ride! Dr. Robin

· 03.04.2018 21:31 · Robin Gareus

MPC4d fun

I pulled into Nashville, Tennessee,…

· 24.11.2015 10:55 · Robin Gareus

Don't break the chain - a year on github

I'm a miserable blogger. Even small attempts to write something short regularly once per week failed in the past.

Trying to get to the bottom of this, I realized that the issue here is blogging: I'm generally not interested to shout out my opinion one-way to the public at regular intervals. But what about other areas of communications? For example programming language code?

Another aspect that I noticed to distract me are lack of constraints: Focus on a topic is beneficial to weave a chain. …and the key ingredient for me is a good challenge to motivate me.

Recognizing one's shortcomings is the first step, playing to one's strength.. et voila.

I set out a year ago today (after the skiing holidays), and the rest is [in the] git history :)

I killed two birds with one stone: combine my interest as user and developer in the Linux Audio ecosystem in general and responsibilities I shouldered there, with the endeavor to set a good example on the following statement:

If every Linux Audio developer would make regular contributions to the GNU/Linux Audio ecosystem, the overall state would increase rapidly.

The idea came up in the wake of one of the most active thread on the linux-audio-dev and -users mailing lists 2/Feb/2013 "So what do you think sucks about Linux Audio?". Well, instead of bitching about, I opted to provide a different response, “A patch a day keeps bit-rot away” :)

The contributions made over the last year are spread out about half/half to projects of my own and to projects with a different lead-developer or maintainer.

As for the former, I've been most active in meters.lv2, the goal being to make GNU/Linux even more suitable as a platform for Pro-Audio work. Regarding the latter I became a major contributor to the flag-ship of Linux Audio: The Ardour3 Digital Audio Workstation. On the sidelines there were (and are) many more projects, not all of them on github.

I'm not personally interested in data-mining and analyzing the commit-log for patterns. The general Mantra of it all is “Find something that you're interested in, can do, and do it”. The only problem here is that eventually there's much more to do that there is time for doing it. Luckily there is some overlap with many projects as well as with my personal and professional use-cases which makes it easier to set priorities, even though not necessarily favorable ones from the 'fun' point of view.

Another related issue is that collaboration requires communication with other authors, which can prevent a regular code-contribution pattern. While this is a good thing in general (plan, think and discuss first), it did not aid the challenge at hand… In fact, this “Don't break the chain” coding endeavor required a bit of time-planning in itself to be useful.

The hard part to keep this up was after around 3 month (late spring) and then again later in August/September (summer holidays). Here, I motivated myself with a small side project there: I can now say “I wrote git …on github” :)

Eventually a git commit became daily routine, just like reading mail. A git commit can be anything from a simple one line typo fix to a major rework of a piece of code so the measure of actual contributions is somewhat meaningless, but as the Scottish say: “Many a mickle makes a muckle.”

GitHub rightfully counts bug-reports as contribution to a project, though in my case the goal was a daily contribution to the master branch of some project (not counting fun projects such as the git-message).

Anyway, it's been a rewarding experience and I'm planning to keep this going, maybe not as rigorously as during the last year, since other (non code) projects are about to become more central in the not too distant future. Either way I gave up for good on trying to repeat a feat that I managed from age 15 to 25: Play at least 1 hour guitar every day.

meters.lv2 - advanced audio level meters

Coming late to my own party..

In the wake of overhauling Ardour's bar-graph meters, I've taken the time to implement corresponding needle-style meters and more.

meters.lv2 features 10 needle-style meters: Mono and stereo variants of DIN, Nordic, EBU, BBC and VU types (which are based on jmeters by Fons Adriaensen).

Additionally it includes a Stereo Phase Correlation Meter, an EBU-R128 Meter with Histogram and History display, a Digital True-Peak Meter, a Stereo Phase Scope (Goniometer), a 31 Band Spectrum-Analyzer and six K-meters (mono,stereo versions of the K12, K14 and K20 K meter-standard by Bob Katz).

Source-code, information and screenshots can be found at https://github.com/x42/meters.lv2

Alexandre Prokoudine has written a nice blog-post over at LGW and gave away a hard-copy of the “Audio Metering. Measurements, Standards, Practice” book by Eddy Brixen to celebrate the release.

meters.lv2 would not be what it is without the various contributions from Fons Adriaensen, David Robillard, Chris Goddard and Axel Müller. Thanks to Jaromír Mikeš they are already packaged in debian, part of the x42-plugins package.



Ardour 3.2

Ardour 3.2 has been released featuring the videotimeline and a lot of other things that I've been working on on the past years, months and weeks!

I count myself lucky that after all that work, I don't need to write the announcement by myself. Let the buzz begin.

There's…

Many thanks to everyone who contributed, provided feedback and support. In particular Chris Goddard, Thomas Vecchione and Paul Davis. Not to mention the projects on who made this possible in the first place – most notably ffmpeg.

The source-code is available out there and if you don't want to get the official ready-to-run application, various multimedia GNU/Linux distributions have already picked it up.

· 15.06.2013 18:30 · Robin Gareus
 
start.1353824929.txt.gz · Last modified: 25.11.2012 07:28 by rgareus