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04:59 PM
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3D "Digital" Phonograph Record
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[quote:Formally CannabisUser1111111 75555655:MV80MTk0MTM5Xzc2Mjk3NTY0X0E0Qzk1OTE1] jfyi OPIE. Some DVD and BluRay already have an option to choose different dialogs per native tongue and we have subtitles too, to boot. There are various containers as you well know that hold different types of data according to what codec and decoder you're using, ie: mp3, flac, avi, mpg and so on. Are you not trying to re-invent the wheel type of thing. Still an interesting concept though. :spock: [/quote]
Original Message
I have some thoughts about a different and (new?) way to output sound and CC (closed captioning) in one move.
Vinyl Language Data
I imagine we would need a specified language (eg. English) recorded into per "digital vinyl record disc" or vinyl language data. Each contains a mapped 3D audio of all waveforms of a specified language (eg. the sound of each alphabetic letter [a to z] and other characters) within (an audiocal?) Cartesian coordinate system. And also each waveform is affixed with another data type; alphabetic letter or character in a text format.
How-it-Work - Translator
I guess that the translator would start at centric zero point in the audiocal Cartesian coordinate system. Then, with an incoming of sound.. the translator starts moving and correlating it to the "trace" paths of recorded sound waveforms of a specified language (eg. English), potentially outputting both sound and cc text in the process. Every-time a sound makes a transitive move to pause/stop, the translator moves right back to the zero point and starts doing its thing as sound resumes or new ones come in.
Seeing that this could be an efficient way to output two different ways of a same information. Manual setup but automatic operation in real time.
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