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From: | |
Reply To: | Senk, Mark J. |
Date: | Fri, 3 Oct 2003 09:12:44 -0400 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
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This was a sidebar to the previous article. I wonder how soon a two hour
movie will be accelerated to 90 minutes to allow for added television
commercials. I think you will be impressed by listening to the time altered
music and voice clips (i.e. James Brown) clips on Mr. Liang's web site.
Tools to Help You Listen
Tools
Enounce Plug-In
[1]www.enounce.com
The 2XAV plug-in, which allows accelerated playback on Real or Windows
media players, can be downloaded for $29.95 (free seven-day trial
period; no Mac version available).
Windows Media Player 9
[2]www.microsoft.com/windows/windowsmedia
To use the built-in variable-speed playback feature in Windows Media
Player 9 (only for XP-based systems), go to the Play menu and select
Play Speed. You can also gain access to this feature through
View/Enhancements/Play Speed Settings.
Panasonic DVD
[3]www.panasonic.com
Some of Panasonic's latest DVD recorders (for example, the DMR-E50 and
DMR-E60) and players (the DVD-S35) allow a disc to play at up to 1.7
times its original speed, allowing you to watch some movies in just
over an hour.
Talking Book Player
[4]www.telex.com
The Telex Scholar Digital Talking Book Player, designed for the blind
and dyslexic, is a hand-held device that plays back CD's or MP3's at
accelerated speeds ($249).
Recordings
Yi Liang's Site
[5]ivms.stanford.edu/~liang/research/sigproc2/index.html
Some recorded examples of digitally accelerated (30 percent) speech
can be heard at a site maintained by Mr. Liang, a Stanford doctoral
student.
Research Papers
[6]rvl4.ecn.purdue.edu/~malcolm/interval/1997-061 (very fast examples)
[7]www.cs.toronto.edu/~roweis/sp.html
Posted by
Mark Senk | 412-386-6513 | [log in to unmask]
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