input 8000hz / output 44100hz
Hi,
I have a bluetooth microphone device with a maximum sampling rate input of 8000hz. I want to use it in a patch set at 44100hz because the sound card don't go under that sampling rate. Is there anyway to convert direct after the adc~ the 8000hz sound to 44100hz?
thanks,
Mathieu
Mathieu Marcoux schrieb:
> I have a bluetooth microphone device with a maximum sampling rate
> input of 8000hz. I want to use it in a patch set at 44100hz because
> the sound card don't go under that sampling rate.
Are you sure its the sampling rate? I guess its the highest frequency it
will pass on. Does it work? how does it sound in Max?
If your mic works in your operating system, the OS will deal with it, no
need to worry about sample rate conversion...
> Is there anyway to convert direct after the adc~ the 8000hz sound to
> 44100hz?
If your mic would put out 8000 Hz, you would have given it back to the
dealer or thrown it into the trash....
If you really want to change 8000 Hz to 44100 Hz, make sure you have a
sound card with at least 192 kHz sampling rate... ;-)
Stefan
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Stefan Tiedje------------x-------
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This answer don't really help. I need technical advice not artistic one ;)
> > I have a bluetooth microphone device with a maximum sampling rate
> > input of 8000hz. I want to use it in a patch set at 44100hz because
> > the sound card don't go under that sampling rate.
>
> Are you sure its the sampling rate?
YES.
> I guess its the highest frequency it
> will pass on. Does it work?
NOP! This is the sampling rate.
> how does it sound in Max?
OK if I use the speaker in the headset because the sampling rate stay the same.
> If your mic works in your operating system, the OS will deal
> with it, no need to worry about sample rate conversion...
The OS don't deal with the conversion.
jawbone in = 8000hz sampling rate
mac out = 44100 hz samplig rate
> If your mic would put out 8000 Hz, you would have given it back
> to the dealer or thrown it into the trash....
http://www.jawbone.com/technology.php
I plan to use the noise shield technology in a context of a live performance.
thanks for any comment who can help...
Mathieu
Hi Stefan,
by the way, the link in your signature don't work.
Mathieu
On May 1, 2008, at 10:25 AM, Mathieu Marcoux wrote:
> The OS don't deal with the conversion.
> jawbone in = 8000hz sampling rate
> mac out = 44100 hz samplig rate
What OS are you on? If you're on the Mac, what does Audio MIDI Setup
say as far as input rates go?
I can't imagine how audio at a rate that isn't the system rate is
delivered to an application, if the OS doesn't handle it. How is this
audio delivered into Max?
poly~ can upsample, but only by powers of two.
-C
Chris Muir
cbm@well.com
http://www.xfade.com
Mathieu Marcoux schrieb:
> The OS don't deal with the conversion.
> jawbone in = 8000hz sampling rate
> mac out = 44100 hz samplig rate
Are there drivers for the headset? Then you don't have to deal with it,
the drivers do it. Do you get the headset configured in Audio/Midisetup?
Max doesn't have any audio drivers, but it talks to any drivers, they
provide info about sampling rate and alike.
In OS X 10.4.x you can define an aggregat device (multiple interfaces)
which will have an option of "resample" (You don't want to limit your
output to 4 kHz I guess...)
Good luck
Stefan
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Stefan Tiedje------------x-------
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