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2016-12-27http -> https, and relocate homepage to https://80x24.org/dtas/
HTTPS allows some level of security(*) and we've actually supported it on 80x24.org for many months, now. So, point new readers to it. Moving away from hostname-based homepages will allow us to save on subjectAltName space (and bandwith) when negotiating an HTTPS connection. We'll also have an .onion mirror for Tor users, soon, too; in case we can't afford to pay ICANN in the future. (assuming TLS libraries don't have any more Heartblead-level bugs in them, CAs aren't compromised, MITM HTTPS stripping proxies don't get in your way, and your certificate bundle isn't compromised).
2016-01-02copyright updates for 2016
Using the 'update-copyright' script from gnulib[1]: git ls-files | UPDATE_COPYRIGHT_HOLDER='all contributors' \ UPDATE_COPYRIGHT_USE_INTERVALS=2 \ xargs /path/to/gnulib/build-aux/update-copyright [1] git://git.savannah.gnu.org/gnulib.git
2015-12-25enable "frozen_string_literal: true"
While we're in the area, make a wording change from "GPLv3 or later" to "GPL-3.0+", as the latter is favored by SPDX.org
2015-01-19update copyright years and links to mailing list archives
The documentation part is managed by the new Documentation/update-copyright script. For the future, the rest may be managed by the update-copyright tool in gnulib
2015-01-19partstats: use Etc.nprocessors on Ruby 2.2+
This will likely become more available and faster than GNU nproc(1) over time.
2014-06-06update copyrights and email address for 2014
I'm still normal, and still trolling, but 80x24.org will be epic :)
2013-10-09dtas-partstats: initial implementation
dtas-partstats divides large audio files into small partitions (10 seconds by default) and runs the "stats" effect of sox(1) against each partition. Currently it emits space-delimited output, but configurable output options (including Sequel/SQLite) support is coming. The intended use of this tool is for quickly finding the loudest portions of a given recording without the need for a graphical viewer. This can be useful for selectively applying (and testing the results of) dynamic range compression filters. Use with sort(1) in a pipeline is recommended in this scenario (but again, Sequel support is coming).