Nice to see that you recognize it! I remember I was originally going to go for something like a C major scale, but the distance between the notes was not big enough to see nicely in the spectrogram and understand it intuitively. With the Prelude, the wide range of the arpeggio was good for practical reasons, while still being a nice, melodic example to listen to. It worked perfectly :D
Been a month... did you figure your phreak frequency hack out, or was it panned full left in a pair of headphones with a broken left driver? Don't bring up things like this and think people aren't going to hound you until we get some resolution.
I appreciate your follow up. I have completed the hacking challenge, this video did actually help with this and it was very rewarding to learn something new on a software I learnt in high school science. We can link up on socials if you wanted?
@@lachlanpr8463 Nice - good to hear! Utoobe and reditt are about as social as I get. I am curious to know more details on the challenge, and how this helped. I'm here trying to see [pun not intended] what I've been missing in audio production by not knowing how to utilize spectrograms. Trying to EQ out these really annoying high pitched `DING!` and `dee-dee-dee-dee` noises in videos/streams without destroying the rest of the audio content. I've got something working well enough, but there's always room for improvement.
Well best of luck, I’m not gonna touch music production as it seems like your ball park but this hacking challenge was from TryHackMe, it’s basically Duolingo for cybersecurity. I at least encourage you to get a basic foundation of networking as it opens up a lot of avenues. This challenge was related to open-source intelligence, or OSINT for short. The spectrogram I had to work with wasn’t anything fancy but when you open the sound in spectrogram format it gave the form of a password in alphanumeric characters…was pretty cool
Psst... The spectrogram in the thumbnail actually says "Spectrograms in Audacity"
Loving the FF prelude ;)
Nice to see that you recognize it!
I remember I was originally going to go for something like a C major scale, but the distance between the notes was not big enough to see nicely in the spectrogram and understand it intuitively. With the Prelude, the wide range of the arpeggio was good for practical reasons, while still being a nice, melodic example to listen to. It worked perfectly :D
VERY well explained - thank you!
Hmmm, you Hima, right?
I’m here because of a hacking challenge, hope this pans out 😂
did it?
Been a month... did you figure your phreak frequency hack out, or was it panned full left in a pair of headphones with a broken left driver? Don't bring up things like this and think people aren't going to hound you until we get some resolution.
I appreciate your follow up. I have completed the hacking challenge, this video did actually help with this and it was very rewarding to learn something new on a software I learnt in high school science. We can link up on socials if you wanted?
@@lachlanpr8463 Nice - good to hear! Utoobe and reditt are about as social as I get. I am curious to know more details on the challenge, and how this helped. I'm here trying to see [pun not intended] what I've been missing in audio production by not knowing how to utilize spectrograms. Trying to EQ out these really annoying high pitched `DING!` and `dee-dee-dee-dee` noises in videos/streams without destroying the rest of the audio content. I've got something working well enough, but there's always room for improvement.
Well best of luck, I’m not gonna touch music production as it seems like your ball park but this hacking challenge was from TryHackMe, it’s basically Duolingo for cybersecurity. I at least encourage you to get a basic foundation of networking as it opens up a lot of avenues. This challenge was related to open-source intelligence, or OSINT for short. The spectrogram I had to work with wasn’t anything fancy but when you open the sound in spectrogram format it gave the form of a password in alphanumeric characters…was pretty cool
i am the 16th viewer, please pin me