SoundConverter is the leading audio file converter for the GNOME Desktop.It reads anything GStreamer can read(Ogg Vorbis, AAC, MP3, FLAC, WAV, AVI, MPEG, MOV, M4A, AC3, DTS, ALAC, MPC, Shorten, APE, SID, MOD, XM, S3M, etc...),and writes to Opus, Ogg Vorbis, FLAC, WAV, AAC, and MP3 files, or use any GNOME Audio Profile.

This functions should be similar to the current smoke detector sound detection flag/alert. Outdoor cameras should have the ability to sound the alarm (optionally) or notify the user/owner of the triggered event immediately.


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This is extra sad as my street has been victims of catalytic converter theft 3 times. 3 times the owner heard something out of the normal of sawing. These thefts happen within 1-2 mins. Besides our street being hit we know many people in our city where this has happened.

If we can detect a person and then the sawing sound so it can activate a siren or special alert it could be a surprising deterrent.

My thought:

Have a setting to enable special monitor by owner. eg. 2-4 am.

If person detect + zone + saw sound. Activate siren or per speech.

Switch Audio Converter Features Convert between 75+ audio file formats Convert common voice recording audio file formats such as WAV, MP3, M4A to text Convert audio to text .txt and .srt with AI speech recognition software Convert MP3 audio files to text Music tags preserved for supporting formats 

(e.g., MP3, WAV, WMA, FLAC and OGG) Import and convert a playlist (M3U and PLS) Extract audio from DVDs and video files 

(e.g., AVI, MOV, MPEG) Access online database to add song information Listen to tracks prior to conversion Batch convert many audio files at once Convert from multiple file formats at one time Use your right click menu to convert audio files directly from Windows Explorer Automatically normalize audio while converting MP3 encoder for constant or variable bit rates WAV encoder and FLAC converter supports a range of sample rates Use as a command line plugin for automation with software to convert or compress audio files Equalize audio as you convert files Use dynamic range compression to limit the volume range of an audio file Drag and drop files for easy conversion Download Now 

 Switch Top Features Convert Audio Formats Supports converting between all popular audio file formats.

Audio Converter Power Features Extract audio from DVD Convert music from MIDI to MP3, WAV, etc. Normalize audio levels Batch convert thousands of files Convert voice recordings to text files Convert audio from MP3 to text filesTypical Audio Converter Applications Convert audio files for your iPod, phone or tablet Compress audio files to save hard drive space Convert to MP3 or M4R for use as a ringtone Convert audio files not supported by other software Extract sound bites from video files or DVDs Open formats not supported by your sound editor Create compressed MP3 files for easy online sharing Convert audiobooks to M4B to listen to on iTunes Popular Audio Format Conversions Switch supports more than 75 different file formats, and is often used as an MP3 converter or a WAV file converter. Below is the list of some of the popular conversions you can carry out. For the full list of supported formats, click here.

I am trying to connect Beam to a Sony Bravia Tv using an audio converter. I have coaxial out of tv into converter. and optical into converter from beam using Sonos supplied adapter. I am trying unsuccessfully to connect to to beam. message on sonos app says  no signal detected make sure to digital optical adapter and HDMI cable are securely plugged into.... 

it will not connect to tv

i did exactly what you mentioned. used a coaxial cable from the TV out and plugged it into the adapter/converter. Then an optical cable from the adapter/converter to the Sonos adapter cable and that cable to the beam HDMI. But couldn't connect and no sound from the beam.

I work at an aged care facility and we needed to change the DVD player (old one broke down) for one of our activity rooms. The old DVD player had both HDMI output and stereo RCA output. HDMI was connected to our projector, and the RCA sound output was connected to our audio amplifier system which powers many in roof down speakers. We bought a new Panasonic Ultra HD Blu-ray Player DMP-UB400GNK ( -entertainment/blu-ray-and-dvd-players/dmp-ub400gnk.html) however it has no inbuilt RCA output, only HDMI and Optical Out for sound, so we had to also buy a Toslink Digital Optical Coax Coaxial to Analog Audio Converter Cable Adapter RCA (edit accidently linked AtoD look the same -to-analogue-audio-converter/p/AC1715) however we have encountered an odd issue. When we play any standard Audio CD we get perfect sound, however when we try and play any Video DVD the sound is completely corrupt sort of like a loud constant buzz. We have tried every setting and combination of settings on the new Panasonic Blu-ray player however the result is always the same, Audio CDs are perfect, Video DVDs are a disaster. We have yet to try Audio DVDs or Blu-rays since we have none to test.

SK-I, sound effector. Built-in a variety of cool sound effects and a variety of cool LED display lights.


By connecting to the throttle cable and brake cable, it has an adaptable volume and unique brake sound effect.

Multiple line ports.

Sound Converter is an audio converter app for Linux. it can process any audio (or video) file supported by GStreamer, including the ubiquitous MP3, the more marginal M4A, as well as movie files like MOV and MP4.

Another big plus point to Sound Converter versus other apps of this kind is that it has full support multithreaded conversion. This sounds technical and aloof but it means the app is able to convert large numbers of files quickly, utilising all available processor cores.

fre:ac is a free audio converter and CD ripper with support for various popular formats and encoders. It converts freely between MP3, M4A/AAC, FLAC, WMA, Opus, Ogg Vorbis, Speex, Monkey's Audio (APE), WavPack, WAV and other formats.

No Need To Set Gain

Whether you're recording in the studio or on stage, sound levels can fluctuate. The UAC-232's 32-bit float technology captures clip-free, low-noise recordings without the need to set gain.

Catalytic converter thefts are on the upswing, especially in the Bay Area, and what can net a thief up to $300 bucks at a scrapyard or recycler can cost you $1,000 to $5,000 to fix, depending on the model and make of your ride.

What the law says

Senate Bill 627 (Chapter 603, Calderon, Statutes of 2009), added a section to California Business and Professions Code 21610 regarding documentation and record-keeping by core recyclers of purchases and sales of catalytic converters. (Although selling converters is covered under the law, less reputable scrappers can always be found.)

In order to skirt the U.S. safety net, thieves are now collecting and piling up catalytic converters, then, when enough units have been collected, they are sold on the black market and shipped overseas.

There are many file formats used to store digital audio, and they're good for different purposes. Digital audio is, of course, only a representation of sound, a rendering of soundwaves that get translated into sound by a decoder and a set of speakers. Some audio formats, generically called lossless formats, aim to encode audio close to its original analog form. Still, there's a lot of data in the real world, and as yet, digital can only approximate it in very large files. Other audio formats, called lossy formats, balance file size with a reasonable representation of sound.

It's a great feature to have different file formats for audio, and yet it seems that whenever I've saved audio in one format, I inevitably need it in another format. There are several great Linux commands to convert audio files, but sometimes you might want an application you can leave open on your desktop and drag and drop files to, and so there's SoundConverter. A simple, single-purpose application, SoundConverter does exactly, and only, what its name says: It converts sound from one format to another.

The dual-opamp is a low power MCP6002 from Microchip, its bandwidth-gain product is 1 MHz, more than good enough for audio. An advantage of this dual-opamp is that it works from 1.8 V to 6 V and uses 100 uA per amplifier. The total current consumption of the whole device is just over 200 uA so it can easily be powered with a CR2032 battery. Finally a potentiometer that was scavenged from a broken RC-servo, so the sound level can be adjusted.

To my surprise the LED lighting above my workbench produces a 100 Hz hum, (mains is 50 Hz where I live). So the mains adapter doesn't feed it with a smooth DC current.

Seven segment led displays with a TM1637 driver make nice sounds because the digits are scanned one after the other. A clock made with four MAX7219s and DOT-Matrix displays even makes a sound that one might call melodious :) A seconds surprise was my bike light that uses PWM even when it is on the brightest level, I had expected to see a PWM signal only when it was at half intensity. Video on youtube:

There are (at least) two types of those piezo buzzers. One type will produce a beep on its own when you put a voltage on it. Those will not work. The other type will react to the voltage applied to it. They might work but I don't think the sound will be very loud and they will work best on higher frequencies (> 250 Hz) , the 50 Hz mains hum, (or 60 Hz if you're in the US) will probably not be audible.


AJA FiDO fiber converters expand your range all the way up to 10km with Single Mode. Transceivers, transmitters and receivers available with SC or ST connectivity and LC Multi-Mode or Single Mode options. e24fc04721

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