In article , froggy
wrote:
I've just installed Linux (Debian stable version) on an unused laptop I
had lying around (no mean feat considering I'm no computer or
engineering geek!) which I use to listen to Radio 3 through the BBC
iPlayer. Browser is Google Chrome. The audio is streamed through the usb
output into an M2Tech HiFace digital audio interface and then onto a
Cambridge Audio DacMagic. Is there a simple way of measuring or even
'seeing' on the laptop the frequency and bit rates which are being fed
to the usb output from the iPlayer?
Which of the indicator LEDs on the front of the DacMagic light up? That
should tell you the sample rate it is getting.
FWIW The BBC still use 44.1k sample rate. They have said they might go to
48k 'sometime' but I've not noticed a change as yet.
Or by 'bit rate' do you mean the AAC stream rate? If so, then that doesn't
appear outside their plugin with FireFox. No idea how Chrome handles it.
But the Linux *audio* system will presumably just handle the resulting
44.1k LPCM and have no idea of the AAC details.
The older versions of the BBC iPlayer used to show a rate in the Flash
plugin area. But then this ceased to be reliable as a guide as it was
pre-set, not actually detecting the rate. And now they've taken it away
entirely from their newer interfaces I think.
So to find out, use something like a system monitor to see the rate at
which data is arriving over the net. I use gnome-system-monitor on my
Xubuntu machines for this as it gives a total and a running graph. If you
time this you can get a decent idea of the average rate. For R3 it comes
out slightly about the actual AAC rate due to all the added 'overheads' of
the transfer processes.
You *should* get 320k AAC from the 'high' quality choice of R3 live. But
the 'listen again' tends to be lower rates like 192 or 128.
Slainte,
Jim
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