[BC] Free Orban Loudness Meter for Windows now available
mark at shander.com
mark at shander.com
Fri Apr 11 14:27:07 CDT 2008
Thank you for this, Bob!
Robert Orban <rorban at earthlink.net> wrote: As an offshoot from the Optimod 8585 development
project, we have developed a stand-alone loudness
meter for Windows, which we are releasing as a
free public beta. The meter can be downloaded directly by clicking this link:
http://www.orban.com/meter/setup_Free_Orban_Loudness_Meter_1.00.exe
Be sure to read the readme file, which is the
meter's manual. The installer will offer to open
the readme as part of the installation process.
Here is the press release:
ORBAN INTRODUCES FREE LOUDNESS/LEVEL METERING SOFTWARE
San Leandro, CA, April 10, 2008 Orban today
announced that the first public beta of Orban
Loudness Meter software for Windows XP and Vista
is now available for free download from www.orban.com/meter.
This is the first of a family of Orban meters.
Future paid versions will offer upgraded features
including logging, surround monitoring, and
oversampled peak measurements that accurately
indicate the peak level of the audio after D/A conversion.
This software simultaneously displays
instantaneous peaks, VU, PPM, CBS Technology
Center loudness, and ITU BS.1770 loudness. All
meters include peak-hold functionality that makes
the peak indications of the meters easy to see.
The software accepts two-channel stereo inputs.
The VU and PPM meters are split to indicate the
left and right channels. The PPM meter also
displays the instantaneous peak values of the L and R digital samples.
The CBS meter is a"short-term" loudness meter
intended to display the details of
moment-to-moment loudness with dynamics similar
to a VU meter. It uses the Jones & Torick
algorithm developed at the CBS Technology Center
and published in 1981 in the SMPTE
Journal. Created using Orban-developed modeling
software, the DSP implementation typically
matches the original analog meter within 0.5 dB
on sinewaves, tone bursts and noise.
The Jones & Torick algorithm improves upon the
original loudness measurement algorithm developed
by CBS researchers in the late 1960s. Its
foundation is psychoacoustic studies done at CBS
Laboratories over a two year period by Torick and
the late Benjamin Bauer. After surveying existing
equal-loudness contour curves and finding them
inapplicable to measuring the loudness of
broadcasts, Torick and Bauer organized listening
tests that resulted in a new set of
equal-loudness curves based on octave-wide noise
reproduced by calibrated loudspeakers in a
semireverberant 16 x 14 x 8 room, which is
representative of a room in which broadcasts are
normally heard. In 1966, they published this work
in the IEEE Transactions on Audio and
Electroacoustics, along with results from other
tests whose goal was to model the loudness
integration time constants of human hearing.
In 2006, the ITU-R published Recommendation ITU-R
BS.1770: "Algorithms to measure audio programme
loudness and true-peak audio level." Developed by
G.A. Soulodre, the BS.1770 loudness meter uses a
frequency-weighted r.m.s. measurement intended to
be integrated over several seconds ­- perhaps as
long as an entire program segment. As such, it is
considered a "long-term" loudness measurement
because it does not take into account the
loudness integration time constants of human hearing, as does the CBS meter.
Orbans BS.1770 loudness meter uses the Leq(RLB2)
algorithm as specified in the Recommendation.
This applies frequency weighting before the
r.m.s. integrator. The frequency weighting is a
series connection of pre-filter and RLB weighting
curves. The Orban meter precisely implements
equations (1) and (2) in this document by using a
rolling integrator whose integration time is
user-adjustable from one to ten seconds.
Additionally, the Orban meter offers an
experimental long-term loudness indication
derived by post-processing the CBS algorithms
output. This uses a relatively simple algorithm
that attempts to mimic a skilled operators
mental integration of the peak swings of a meter
with "VU-like" dynamics. The operator will
concentrate most on the highest indications but
will tend to ignore a single high peak that is atypical of the others.
Researchers have long been curious about the
Jones & Torick meter but been unable to evaluate
it and compare it with other meters. Orban
developed this software because the company
believed it would be useful to practicing sound
engineers and researchers and also because Orban
is using it in its new Optimod 8585 Surround
Audio Processor. Thanks to this free software,
engineers and scientists will now have the
opportunity to easily compare the CBS algorithm
with others, including the BS.1770 Recommendation.
The Orban software runs on Windows XP and Vista
computers having 1.5 GHz or faster Intel Pentium
4 or Intel-compatible processors that implement
the SSE2 instruction set. While the software can
be driven by any installed Windows sound device,
monitoring playback from an application like
Windows Media Player requires the sound hardware to support Windows Wave I/O.
Bob Orban
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