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From: scott
Subject: Re: 1 GHz CPU and it still cannot time things properly.
Date: 30 May 2012 07:01:59
Message: <4fc5fe27$1@news.povray.org>
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>> Try playing the same song (or your tick recording) on several different
>> devices at the same time, you'll find they likely drift apart noticeably
>> after only a minute or two.
>
> And here I was thinking that even cheap quartz oscillators are quite
> accurate...
Even cheap quartz oscillators are too expensive to just throw at a
device like a tablet. The audio clock is likely derived from elsewhere
with whatever divide-down ratio was cheapest to implement (the frequency
will likely not even be designed to be spot on 44100 if the numbers
don't work out nicely).
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From: Stephen
Subject: Re: 1 GHz CPU and it still cannot time things properly.
Date: 30 May 2012 09:08:29
Message: <4fc61bcd$1@news.povray.org>
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On 30/05/2012 8:57 AM, scott wrote:
>
> There is no reason for a tablet (or any PC/phone) to have a clock
> generator with super accuracy, it's simply wasted expense when an
> accuracy of <1% will do for the majority of tasks. That's why
> professional sound cards have an option to use the clock from an
> incoming signal (rather than the internal one) to keep everything in sync.
>
It was a NTB (Not Too Bright) idea, a eureka moment where I slipped on
the soap when I jumped out of the bath etc.
the software I have will only find the beats to a resolution of 1
is very noisy and automatically finding the beats is not very accurate.
> Try playing the same song (or your tick recording) on several different
> devices at the same time, you'll find they likely drift apart noticeably
> after only a minute or two.
>
I am sure that they would.
> You could try recording the speaking clock as a reference, that is
> probably more accurate than your tablet.
I was using the tablet as a recording device. It is the accuracy of that
which is in doubt. Well it is not actually in doubt, it is not up to the
requirements needed.
My quartz watch was for calibrating/adjusting the figures I got after
analysing the wave form. But the time between ticks is not constant. The
recording program and the sound card probably have too low a priority
for accurate recording. Which is also an answer to Andrew saying that
cheap quartz oscillators are quite accurate. That and the compensation
for voltage and temperature won't be high spec.
* An accuracy of about +/- 7 minutes a day.
--
Regards
Stephen
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From: Invisible
Subject: Re: 1 GHz CPU and it still cannot time things properly.
Date: 31 May 2012 04:12:05
Message: <4fc727d5@news.povray.org>
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On 30/05/2012 12:01 PM, scott wrote:
>>> Try playing the same song (or your tick recording) on several different
>>> devices at the same time, you'll find they likely drift apart noticeably
>>> after only a minute or two.
>>
>> And here I was thinking that even cheap quartz oscillators are quite
>> accurate...
>
> Even cheap quartz oscillators are too expensive to just throw at a
> device like a tablet. The audio clock is likely derived from elsewhere
> with whatever divide-down ratio was cheapest to implement (the frequency
> will likely not even be designed to be spot on 44100 if the numbers
> don't work out nicely).
A deviation in playback speed of +0.6% or -0.6% corresponds to a pitch
deviation of about 10 cents. That's audible. I'd be surprised if they
allow it to be quite that large.
(I would have expected the DAC to run at whatever speed is convenient,
and then resample the signal in software... But what do I know?)
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From: scott
Subject: Re: 1 GHz CPU and it still cannot time things properly.
Date: 31 May 2012 04:50:01
Message: <4fc730b9$1@news.povray.org>
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> A deviation in playback speed of +0.6% or -0.6% corresponds to a pitch
> deviation of about 10 cents. That's audible.
If you play it back on the same hardware you used to record then there
shouldn't be any pitch change :-)
But even if you played back something recorded elsewhere, do you really
think a normal person would notice a 0.6% higher or lower pitch (without
the correct reference pitch to compare with at the same time). When
they show films (shot at 24 fps) on PAL (25 fps) doesn't the video and
audio come out 4% faster and higher pitch (or do they resample that)?
> (I would have expected the DAC to run at whatever speed is convenient,
> and then resample the signal in software... But what do I know?)
If the software knew what the real clock rate was with 100% accuracy
there wouldn't be this discussion in the first place! Anyway if you
were to resample from (say) 43500 Hz to 44100 Hz you're going to get a
lot of artefacts and use a lot of CPU (battery) - better to just play
your 43500 Hz recording assuming it was at 44100 Hz.
You also have conflicting technical requirements in a device like a
tablet. For example the audio circuit needs the clock to be as steady
and accurate as possible, whereas other parts of the circuits will
definitely not want a steady clock frequency to avoid EMC/EMI issues.
Guess which requirement will get forgotten when the EMC tests fail or
the bean counters tighten the strings?
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From: Darren New
Subject: Re: 1 GHz CPU and it still cannot time things properly.
Date: 2 Jun 2012 16:19:57
Message: <4fca756d$1@news.povray.org>
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On 5/29/2012 12:15, Stephen wrote:
> Sh*te! I forgot. I have one of those in the back shed, as well.
They're really not that expensive. I worked for someone who had three or
four. You just have to keep them calibrated.
--
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
"Oh no! We're out of code juice!"
"Don't panic. There's beans and filters
in the cabinet."
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From: Darren New
Subject: Re: 1 GHz CPU and it still cannot time things properly.
Date: 2 Jun 2012 16:21:08
Message: <4fca75b4$1@news.povray.org>
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On 5/30/2012 0:57, scott wrote:
> Try playing the same song (or your tick recording) on several different
> devices at the same time, you'll find they likely drift apart noticeably
> after only a minute or two.
I was trying to play harmony with myself at one point, so I recorded the
first track, then played it back on headphones while I recorded the second
track. Within 8 or 10 measures, I was an entire beat off, when I merged them.
Very annoying. :-)
--
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
"Oh no! We're out of code juice!"
"Don't panic. There's beans and filters
in the cabinet."
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From: Stephen
Subject: Re: 1 GHz CPU and it still cannot time things properly.
Date: 2 Jun 2012 17:26:14
Message: <4fca84f6$1@news.povray.org>
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On 02/06/2012 9:19 PM, Darren New wrote:
> On 5/29/2012 12:15, Stephen wrote:
>> Sh*te! I forgot. I have one of those in the back shed, as well.
>
> They're really not that expensive. I worked for someone who had three or
> four. You just have to keep them calibrated.
>
More expensive than I would buy for one watch.
But not in Andrew's league of hundreds of millions of pounds. ;-)
--
Regards
Stephen
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From: Stephen
Subject: Re: 1 GHz CPU and it still cannot time things properly.
Date: 2 Jun 2012 17:28:32
Message: <4fca8580$1@news.povray.org>
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On 02/06/2012 9:21 PM, Darren New wrote:
>
> Very annoying. :-)
That's what I thought. Grrr!
--
Regards
Stephen
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From: Orchid Win7 v1
Subject: Re: 1 GHz CPU and it still cannot time things properly.
Date: 3 Jun 2012 04:51:03
Message: <4fcb2577$1@news.povray.org>
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On 02/06/2012 09:21 PM, Darren New wrote:
> On 5/30/2012 0:57, scott wrote:
>> Try playing the same song (or your tick recording) on several different
>> devices at the same time, you'll find they likely drift apart noticeably
>> after only a minute or two.
>
> I was trying to play harmony with myself at one point, so I recorded the
> first track, then played it back on headphones while I recorded the
> second track. Within 8 or 10 measures, I was an entire beat off, when I
> merged them.
>
> Very annoying. :-)
Recorded with /what/?
I have a cheap digital 8-track at home, and I do /exactly this/ with it,
and it works perfectly, every single time...
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From: Darren New
Subject: Re: 1 GHz CPU and it still cannot time things properly.
Date: 3 Jun 2012 12:38:14
Message: <4fcb92f6$1@news.povray.org>
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On 6/3/2012 1:51, Orchid Win7 v1 wrote:
> Recorded with /what/?
This was a little pocket MP3 player thingie. It happened to be the only
convenient play-back device I had handy at the moment. I'm not surprised in
hindsight it was off that much, but it was surprising enough that I did it
two or three times before I realized it wasn't me messing things up.
--
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
"Oh no! We're out of code juice!"
"Don't panic. There's beans and filters
in the cabinet."
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