Do not be tempted to play with other graphical monitors. Pull that out of the tree side menu labeled "graphical monitors".
These types of meters are called vu meters because they were made popular by the Velvet Underground in the 60's and 70's - that's not true, I only want to keep you from getting distracted by googling "vu meter"). Since it is so easy with clam, let's start with the vu meter (which is used to visualize the recording level. I said a simple audio recorder, but I wanted a few frills, such as a vu meter and having it be a stand-alone compiled application. Most likely this doesn't merit a how-to since you could probably figure that out by dropping processings on the canvas and connecting them at random. You can do this several ways: you might have audio controls in the system tray/menu bar of your desktop, it might be in some control panel, or you can set it from the command line (e.g., "alsamixer"). If it doesn't have content, you'll need to fiddle with you audio recording settings. Then check the audio file to make sure it was created, and that it has audio content. Then click run (aka "play", the blue circle with the sideways triangle) to start recording and stop to finish recording. Save it (network editor has an uncanny knack for crashing probably due to it's use of a mix of compiled and run time generated components). Then you can set the the file name and the sampling rate. This means that it needs to be configured, so right click on it and select "configure". Notice that the mono audio file writer is red. Then connect them by dragging from the little blue circle (its "output port") of the audio source box ("processing"), to the little blue circle of the mono audio file writer (its "input port"). Drag and drop an AudioSource (under the heading "Audio I/O", and a MonoAudioFileWriter (under the heading of "Audio file I/O"). If you're using the command line too, remember that it is capital N NetworkEditor, unless you happened to name it something else. I like to just use the command line so I can see the diagnostics. (please let me know if this works/doesn't work for you)įirst, fire up the network editor. Since I didn't find anything, I figured that I know enough about clam to write that how-to that I was looking for.
Resolution on a acer x191w monitor how to#
Being the lazy person I am, I searched google for a tutorial about how to do this.
Resolution on a acer x191w monitor code#
Being the great piece of code it is, I decided to use it for a project that required me to simply record audio to files, but also have the room to grow to a bigger better application (speech recognition). Being the lazy person I am, I didn't keep up my involvement, unfortunately, since it is a great piece of code. Once I had the opportunity to get involved with the clam project, with the help of google summer of code.