Tangentially related, I recently had some hand-me-down high-end full tower speakers lose their integrated subwooer amps. I bypassed them and wired in an external amp but people said the integrated DSP would be missing. That's when I learned about CamillaDSP [1] and CamillaFIR [2]. I got a calibrated UMIK-1 microphone and did a frequency sweep in the room. Then I applied the camilla-computed FIR filter to my snapcast-sourced music stream on the Raspberry Pi 3 B I have networked into the living room. Now I have room-corrected and loundspeaker corrected fancy DSP and the speakers sound better than ever. Pretty fun, and very cheap. I did the same process up in my office with some desk speakers and they sound great too (that time using EasyEffects to apply the filter in realtime rather than CamillaDSP).
[1] https://github.com/HEnquist/camilladsp
[2] https://github.com/VilhoValittu/CamillaFIR
I’ve been wanting to follow this tutorial for some time. I think this might make the whole thing way simpler and smaller if all I want is line in.
https://www.raspberrypi.com/news/upcycle-a-sonos-play1/
I wonder if you could do the same thing in reverse and have a cheap way to get multiple inputs.
I would love a cheap way to add 8–16 inputs to my PC; all the audio interfaces I found cost quite a bit.
Looks like output only and only one stereo pair from USB is processed to outputs, but a really cool project.
Also, for those watching for it:
https://www.audiosciencereview.com/forum/index.php?threads/i...
> I can't take all of the credit. My little robot intern (Opus 4.5) has been very helpful with the busy work, leaving me free to handle the trickier planning and implementation. ;)
I recently bought a Behringer U-phono UFO202 as a cheap DAC for my mini pc. Can this Pi thing replace it?
Nice.
I wonder if 264/520 kB RAM is also enough for a high quality parametric stereo reverb/echo effect? Should fit about 3/6 seconds of uncompressed 16-bit 44.1/48 kHz audio.
Also: Raspberry Pi Ltd - please keep increasing the RAM size in future iterations to unlock even more use cases.
And here's the release thread for those of you wanting a bit more detail or to talk with the creator:
https://www.audiosciencereview.com/forum/index.php?threads/i...