Comments
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Ah. Got it. Thanks.
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Oh. I suppose those are directed at me. I had Firefox but hadn't tried it. If Chrome and Edge can't hack it why would I think Firefox would be different. Well golly gee. I just tried with Firefox and it works. No glitches. Strange, but good to kn…
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Interesting. Thanks. :)
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One more point. If 128 zero samples were occasionally inserted into the stream it would give the same symptoms. (At 48 ksps 128 samples is 2.666 ms.)
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OK. Thanks for your help, John. I confess I was skeptical that the root cause was in Chrome/Edge/javascript. But then I tried WebSDR and OpenWebRX and they do exactly the same thing. They are totally different code, right? I'm totally blown away by …
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(This is using) HP desktop or Lenovo laptop. (Windows 11 Home) (Connecting to kiwi radio server via) Chrome or Edge. I'm using the sound system that is native to the computer. Both computers describe it as Realtek. (Is that a virtual sound card?) I…
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(For the images I copied part of the continuous section and pasted it next to the gap to compare phase before and after.)
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If we are losing 2.6 ms of samples every 8 seconds then by the end of a 1200 line fax we should be off by 0.39 lines. Could that have been compensated for in the calibration factor and manual framing control without being aware of it? I use Audacity…
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Hello, John. The dropouts seem to be about 2 ms in length. Timewise they seem to be randomly distributed with an average of about 1 dropout per 8 seconds. I see the same using two different computers and with both Chrome and Edge browsers. Attached …