Sononymextracts a great deal of information from your samples and puts this information at your fingertips, including 'exotic' properties that you might not find elsewhere: perceived brightness, crest factor and timbre, to name a few. Combine this with powerful tools for searching, filtering and sorting samples, and you might just fall in love with your sample collection all over again.
Similarity search enables you to find similar-sounding samples in your sample collection. Basically, pick any sound as input and "see where it takes you" - finding variations has never been this easy. The software can even record live audio and use these recordings to find new samples.
Duplicate Detection identifies duplicate samples across your libraries. But it doesn't just detect identical sounds: by leveraging our Similarity Search technology it also looks for sounds that are nearly identical. So if you happen to own a sample pack with .wav and .aiff versions of every sample, you can use Duplicate Detection to streamline things, and potentially free up some disk space in the process..
While analyzing your samples, the software uses machine learning to categorize the content. The default set of categories in Sononym are broadly based around electronic music production and describe distinctive groups of sounds such as 'snare drums' or 'synth pads'. In addition, all sounds are classified as either looped or non-looped (one-shot) sounds.
Picking out sounds of interest and making them available elsewhere should be an effortless thing to do. But wait, isn't that what we have copy-paste for? True, but sometimes your project demands that you keep track of the file origin, that certain naming conventions are enforced, etc. In Sononym, this is the purpose of Projects: to bookmark, organize and export in a single workflow.
Sononym is fully functional without an internet connection - no clunky 'online activation' to deal with, no risk of forgetting to 'deauthorize' the software - and we won't offer to upload your samples somewhere either. Sononym aims to be your deserted-island sample browser. That said, you are of course free to point your cloud-synchronized folders at Sononym: this is the 21st century, after all.
A grand opening celebration for the new office, which has already commenced operations, will take place on Thursday, September 22nd at the Michigan headquarters, located at 122 South Main Street, Suite 110-C, in Ann Arbor.
The event will feature a press conference followed by an all-day welcoming atmosphere for both volunteers and the at-large public. The afternoon will begin with a noon press conference and celebratory ribbon cutting, continue with an open house and volunteer registration, and conclude with a debate-watching party.
"We're pleased to establish a headquarters in Michigan, which stands to gain a lot from the pro-growth policies of a Ron Paul presidency. Ron Paul's message of Constitutionally-limited government, sound money and a traditional non-interventionist foreign policy is sure to win over Republican voters," said Ron Paul 2012 National Campaign Chairman Jesse Benton.
The Ron Paul 2012 Presidential Campaign has selected Adam de Angeli to coordinate efforts in the state. Mr. De Angeli worked for Dr. Paul's 2008 presidential bid, where he developed software for the campaign's precinct leadership program.
"Adam brings a lot to the table as an experienced political organizer as well as software developer. The tools he builds for Michigan may well be adapted for other state campaigns," said Dimitri Kesari, Ron Paul 2012 Deputy National Campaign Manager.
"The strategy in Michigan is simple: engage every supporter to engage every voter. We will recruit, equip, train, and mobilize volunteers across the state to win their precinct for Dr. Paul," de Angeli said.
This page is a supplement to the Privacy Statement for Microsoft Lync Products. In order to understand the data collection and use practices relevant for a particular Microsoft Lync product or service, you should read both the Privacy statement for Microsoft Lync products and this supplement.
What This Feature Does: Archiving allows your administrator to archive instant-messaging conversations, meeting activities and content, and usage characteristics, such as user sign-ins and conversation starts and joins.
Information Collected, Processed, or Transmitted: Archiving stores the content of instant-messaging conversations, information about your instant messaging usage, meeting content, and meeting information on a server your administrator configures. No information is sent to Microsoft.
What This Feature Does: Activity Feed enables you to see "social updates" from your contacts on your Contacts list. It permits you to display to others your most recent personal notes, changes to your picture, and changes to your title or office location.
Use of Information: This information will be shared with contacts that are viewing your activity feed and are in a Family and Friends, Workgroup, Colleagues, or External Contacts privacy relationship.
On the Personal tab, under Activity Feed, switch the sharing of these updates on or off. Your current personal note and current out-of-office note will appear in the Activity Feed, if they are set. If you do not want information displayed in your personal note, you can simply leave the note field blank.
What This Feature does: The Check Call Quality button allows to you to make a test call on Lync so that you can check the voice quality of the call. It allows you to hear how you would sound in a real call. When you make a test call, the Audio Test Service prompts you to record a voice sample after a beep. Your voice sample will be recorded for a pre-defined time period (for example 5 seconds) and then it is played back to you. If the network is sub-optimal, or if you do not have a good device setup, you will discover this from the recording playback.
Information Collected, Processed, or Transmitted: If you make a test call, the Audio Test Service records your voice sample after a prompt. The voice samples are deleted after you end the call. No information is sent to Microsoft.
Use of Information: The voice sample is for your own use to check how you would sound in a real call and to indicate to you that your device is setup properly and is ready to make a call. The user can listen to this recorded voice sample to determine whether he/she is ready to make a real call by verifying that their device is in working order and audio is being rendered properly.
Information Collected, Processed, or Transmitted: Information about your voice calls, such as start time, end time, duration, and call participants, will be stored in your Outlook Conversation History folder. You or your enterprise administrator may also log your meeting subject and locations by choosing to use Outlook as your personal information manager on the Personal tab of the Options dialog box. Call Logs does not store the content of your voice calls. No information is sent to Microsoft.
What This Feature Does: Call Delegation allows you to assign one or more delegate(s) and then have your delegate(s) place and answer calls on your behalf and set-up and join online meetings on your behalf.
Information Collected, Processed, or Transmitted: When your delegate(s) answer a call on your behalf, you will receive an email notification informing you about this event. No information is sent to Microsoft.
Use of Information: You can use this feature to work with your delegate(s) to manage your schedule and meetings and/or follow-up with your delegates about calls they make and answer for you (or on your behalf).
Enterprise administrators can set up Exchange Calendar Delegate sync-up with Lync Server 2010. When enabled, Exchange Calendar Delegates with appropriate permissions (equal to or greater than Nonediting Author permissions) will be automatically added as your delegates in Lync. This however, does not change your Call Forwarding settings.
Choice/Control: Call Forwarding options are available only if your enterprise administrator has enabled them for your organization. If your enterprise administrator has enabled this feature for your organization, it is off by default on your Lync desktop client. Configure Call Forwarding using the following steps:
Select New Number or Contact. In the Select a Contact or Number dialog box, click a contact, search for a contact, or enter a new phone number to forward calls to, and then click OK. Click OK again.
Information Collected, Processed, or Transmitted: When you dial in to a conference call, the phone number that you are calling from (the caller ID) is displayed for all participants. No information is sent to Microsoft.
If the functionality is available in your area, you can type in a special code before dialing the phone number to block your caller ID for a single call. Please contact your local telephone company for instructions.
What This Feature Does: Client-Side Logging enables you to log your Lync usage information on your computer in your user profile. The information can be used for troubleshooting Lync issues you may experience.
Information Collected, Processed, or Transmitted: If you or your administrator enables Client-Side Logging, information such as the following will be stored on your computer: meeting subject, location, session initiation protocol (SIP) messages, responses to your Lync invites, information about the sender and receiver of each Lync message, the route that the message took, your Contacts list, your presence information, names of any programs you share, names of any attachments you share, names of any Microsoft PowerPoint files you share, names of any Whiteboards you share, names of any polls you share, poll questions that were shared and an index of the option you voted . The contents of your Lync conversations are not stored. No information is automatically sent to Microsoft, but you can choose to manually send information.
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