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WMix 3.1
WMix is a dockapp mixer for OSS or ALSA. more>>
WMix is a dockapp mixer for OSS or ALSA. Allows toggling record source, muting individual channels, adjusting volume and balance, all in a compact dockapp size, with TV-like on-screen-display for volume levels.
Supports mousewheel to adjust current channel volume, and can be controlled remotely with SIGUSR1 / SIGUSR2 to adjust the volume, too. It can use a configuration file to control some of the features.
Main features:
- This is a complete dockapp mixer utilizing the OSS mixer API
- Has a nice On-Screen-Display to visualize current volume levels
- Can adjust main volume, balance, recording status, and mute/unmute channels
- Supports mousewheel to adjust the volume settings
- Supports user specified signals to adjust the volume remotely
- User configuration file can be used to set options
Enhancements:
- Fixed a 3 years old bug about volume level showing up as "0" when its actually set to 10. Thank to all 20 or so people who e-mailed me about this.
- Changed struct mixer_info name to allow compiling wmix under 2.6.1+ kernels.
- Thanks Neil Burch for the patch.
- Added a patch to enable exclusion of channels from display - allows you to
- remove mixer channels you never use. adds -e command line option
- which can be repeated any number of times. Thanks to Nicolas Descomps .
- Added #include since glibc finally fixed most of the includes since 2001.
<<lessSupports mousewheel to adjust current channel volume, and can be controlled remotely with SIGUSR1 / SIGUSR2 to adjust the volume, too. It can use a configuration file to control some of the features.
Main features:
- This is a complete dockapp mixer utilizing the OSS mixer API
- Has a nice On-Screen-Display to visualize current volume levels
- Can adjust main volume, balance, recording status, and mute/unmute channels
- Supports mousewheel to adjust the volume settings
- Supports user specified signals to adjust the volume remotely
- User configuration file can be used to set options
Enhancements:
- Fixed a 3 years old bug about volume level showing up as "0" when its actually set to 10. Thank to all 20 or so people who e-mailed me about this.
- Changed struct mixer_info name to allow compiling wmix under 2.6.1+ kernels.
- Thanks Neil Burch for the patch.
- Added a patch to enable exclusion of channels from display - allows you to
- remove mixer channels you never use. adds -e command line option
- which can be repeated any number of times. Thanks to Nicolas Descomps .
- Added #include since glibc finally fixed most of the includes since 2001.
Download (0.020MB)
Added: 2006-08-03 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1393 downloads
Volume.app 1.1a
Volume.app is a small graphical software utility enabling quick and convenient control of a computers audio volume level. more>>
Volume.app is a small graphical software utility enabling quick and convenient control of a computers audio volume level. Volume.app is intended for use on Linux/Unix systems in conjunction with an X window manager that supports dockable applications ("dockapps") such as AfterStep, BlackBox, or Window Maker.
It is a refinement of an idea that first appeared in Timecops WMix: a user interface comprising a "knob" that can be interactively "turned" by clicking and dragging the mouse. I found this approach quite appealing, both from an aesthetic viewpoint, and (more importantly) from a user-interface perspective.
A handful of other dockapp volume control programs are out there, and I have tried many of them. An interface element present in most of these is some form of "slider" as the primary means of adjusting the volume. (A fictitious example may be seen at right). To my dismay, with this kind of interface, volume adjustments tended to be large and abrupt. Because the slider was so small, raising or lowering the volume "just a bit" required extremely careful control of the mouse-- a slip of the hand had the potential to spike the volume to full blast. (I have a set of Altec-Lansing ACS48 speakers which make this a rather unpleasant experience). This approach left much to be desired.
I longed for an alternative, and upon playing with WMix (pictured at left) I had found it. The knob was genius in that it provided a means of graphically adjusting the volume, as a slider would, without tying itself directly to the motion of the mouse. The basic mode of usage is identical: you click on the thing and drag the mouse up or down. However, with the knob, the range of motion need not be confined to the postage-stamp-sized area of the dockapp. The mouse travel needed to cover the entire range of volume settings can be made longer, on the order of the full height of the screen-- almost like a much larger, easier-to-use slider. No longer were precise movements needed to make volume adjustments!
Still, I found WMixs interface to be a bit busy (never was a fan of tiny little buttons) and the all-important knob was yet a rather small target to find with the mouse. So, I grabbed a copy of the WMix source code, and rebuilt it into a dockapp that had a much larger knob as its sole interface element. I dubbed it Volume.app, and have placed it here for the benefit of everyone.
<<lessIt is a refinement of an idea that first appeared in Timecops WMix: a user interface comprising a "knob" that can be interactively "turned" by clicking and dragging the mouse. I found this approach quite appealing, both from an aesthetic viewpoint, and (more importantly) from a user-interface perspective.
A handful of other dockapp volume control programs are out there, and I have tried many of them. An interface element present in most of these is some form of "slider" as the primary means of adjusting the volume. (A fictitious example may be seen at right). To my dismay, with this kind of interface, volume adjustments tended to be large and abrupt. Because the slider was so small, raising or lowering the volume "just a bit" required extremely careful control of the mouse-- a slip of the hand had the potential to spike the volume to full blast. (I have a set of Altec-Lansing ACS48 speakers which make this a rather unpleasant experience). This approach left much to be desired.
I longed for an alternative, and upon playing with WMix (pictured at left) I had found it. The knob was genius in that it provided a means of graphically adjusting the volume, as a slider would, without tying itself directly to the motion of the mouse. The basic mode of usage is identical: you click on the thing and drag the mouse up or down. However, with the knob, the range of motion need not be confined to the postage-stamp-sized area of the dockapp. The mouse travel needed to cover the entire range of volume settings can be made longer, on the order of the full height of the screen-- almost like a much larger, easier-to-use slider. No longer were precise movements needed to make volume adjustments!
Still, I found WMixs interface to be a bit busy (never was a fan of tiny little buttons) and the all-important knob was yet a rather small target to find with the mouse. So, I grabbed a copy of the WMix source code, and rebuilt it into a dockapp that had a much larger knob as its sole interface element. I dubbed it Volume.app, and have placed it here for the benefit of everyone.
Download (0.025MB)
Added: 2006-10-03 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1128 downloads
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