I fought in synth battle royale today and still feel wired. It was catastrophic! Now I know publius' ffmpeg line works for me as well, so the lispy gopher show will come alive henceforward. I haven't listened to the/an sbr review yet, having a mind to pen some thoughts first. The lineup was tob mnw gef abortretryfail ldbeth screwtape and smj. x2180 was too late to get in the list today. Everyone was amazing, and it was mnw's first battle royale as well. Please enjoy the sbr review, for which I will remember to insert a link here. If you will forgive me, I will concentrate on my own experience. http://archives.anonradio.net/202209170300_openmic.mp3 publius' ffmpeg line worked without a hitch for openmic (I had only tested it locally) when it came my turn. I had previously gotten excited when smj said it was time for a first time contestant (mnw of That's News To Me in that case). (I forgot mnw's tagline, You Can't Spell _____ without mnw. The word eludes me. Swamphen? j/k ;p). Since a piece of (virtual) hardware I wanted to play with was using my sndio snd/mon virtual system sound monitor device, with the idea of feeding that to itself as some notion of an integrator autonomous feedback circuit, I had aNONradio waiting-for-me music feeding back into my system sound when I first connected. Emergency abort. I had two (out of three) modes of getting sound, nestled comfortably within my ecl lisp repl. I could direct sine waveforms into wav files using libsndfile from my lisp sffi. This, I guess, was my synth software. I had written this soft synth personally, unrelatedly (kind of), though tob did not seem pleased by that. And it just takes a function float -> float and gives you a wav of the desired ength. As I said, I had a system sound monitor. What occurred to me was to sample others' live battles into my own round (even though I guess this was outside my 10 minutes). I did this by experimentally catching batches of seconds from my system sound monitor. This was tricky (well, download the results and see) since I didn't know what improvisational sound would be made next and had to keep trying to get lucky. *I have to compress these before I post them. I made it about five minutes into my 10 (or less) minute timer before I bailed from the round. Screwtape was an appropriate name for me, I was told. One thing about being in the Common Lisp repl was that I had its LOOP construct, and from the compiler, ECL's multiprocessing threads handy. Having generated/gotten sounds, and started a loop thread, all you can really do is sit on your hands or add sound loop threads (and eventually stop them). In the future when I include my SND/1 mic, which I left out this time, it will be important to explain my environment and intents. Over the course of round 2, I picked up some nice sophisticated beats and synth from my sound monitor and just started those, along with generating a series of variants of A (420, 438, 440, something else) I asked for from the COMmentators. The trill of A beats sounded a lot like a phone ringing. Honestly, it took me a while to figure out that that was what the phone / dialup sound was. The beats I had picked up, and I-think-gef's synth (along with mnw's voice saying OK) seemed to give me a pretty nice sound, though I still don't know how that came across the icecast. I tried unmuting the aNONradio stream to take a peek (which would have ended up in my stream as well, I guess) but to no clear avail. I jammed a random previous-snd/mon-snippet function, but bailed after about two minutes of round 2. In this second case, smj was quick to pick up on my finished stream with amazing synth. I'm listening to it now... [Listening to it, I hope that I can give tob-like dictation - I was too nervous to pay attention before]