Overview
Designing Web Audio is the most complete Internet audio guide on the market. It's loaded with informative real-world case studies and interviews with some of the world's leading audio and web producers. It contains step-by-step intstructions on how to build multimedia web pages using the most popular web audio formats. This book also includes a wealth of basic digital audio and sound wave theory, practical tips and techniques for recording and editing audio for the Web, and an invaluable buyer's guide to building an effective sound studio.
Designing Web Audio explains how digital audio is encoded from microphone to hard disk; how sound is processed using compression and equalization; and how to turn audio source material into a great soundtrack using loops and ambient soundscapes. Designing Web Audio demystifies its subject with informative step-by-step techniques for encoding, compression, and streaming audio over the Web.
This book includes the following:
- The most up-to-date, step-by-step guides to the latest popular streaming media formats for building multimedia web pages including RealAudio, Shockwave, Flash, MP3, MIDI, and RMF (Beatnik).
- A step-by-step guide to building multimedia Synchronized Media Integration Language (SMIL) presentations using the new RealSystem G2. (This is the only book on the market that offers information on this.)
- In-depth coverage of the sound design principles for building effective multimedia web pages with sound, including examples of real-world sound design techniques used by leading film and CD-ROM sound designers.
- Informative case studies featuring leading companies such as N2K, Fox News Corp, TechWeb, and Sonicopia, and how they are enhancing their web pages using Flash, RealAudio, Shockwave, or Beatnik's audio technologies.
- Tips from two Academy Award-winning sound designers that will help web professionals use audio more intelligently.
- In-depth consumer buyer's guide with street prices and tips for buying the best gear at the lowest prices to produce high-quality Internet audio in-house.
- Thorough practical coverage of digital audio theory and basic recording and editing techniques.
The easy-to-follow, step-by-step instructions on using the leading audio formats makes Designing Web Audio an invaluable resource for web developers and people who want to stream their own music over the Web.
"Sound Design for the Web" is loaded with informative, real-world case studies, interviews with some of the world's leading audio and Web producers, and step-by-step instructions on how to use the most popular Web audio formats.
Synopsis
"Sound Design for the Web" is loaded with informative, real-world case studies, interviews with some of the world's leading audio and Web producers, and step-by-step instructions on how to use the most popular Web audio formats.
Booknews
Provides step-by-step techniques for encoding, compressing, and streaming audio over the web using the RealAudio, MP3, Flash, and Beatnik formats. Assuming prior knowledge of HTML, the authors also show how to add sound files to a web site and how to integrate multiple audio components into a web soundtrack. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
Editorials
From Barnes & Noble
The Barnes & Noble ReviewAudio offers the potential to add an entirely new dimension to web sites, but most sites that use it do so poorly, and virtually none use it to its fullest potential. Enter Designing Web Audio, the practical, authoritative, and thorough guide to web-based audio. From theory and technology to step-by-step production and delivery techniques, leading audio producers Josh Beggs and Dylan Thede have written the guide to the subject.
If you're buying equipment, Beggs and Thede offer guidance based on their many years of experience -- including solid information on street prices. They also walk you through every step of the production process: encoding from microphone to hard disk, equalization, normalization, compression, editing, mastering, and batch conversion.
You'll learn practical techniques such as looping and creating ambient soundscapes -- and get expert tips for maximizing web audio's benefits while speeding downloads. You'll also find a batch of intriguing case studies, ranging from Fox News to TechWeb.
There's extensive coverage of RealAudio, MP3, MIDI, Shockwave, Flash, and Beatnik RMF -- as well as a chapter on creating presentations with RealMedia G2 and the brand-new XML-based SMIL format. Other formats -- including WMF, QuickTime, and Liquid Audio -- get covered, too, albeit somewhat more briefly. Whether you want to experiment with web audio, or you're a musician who wants to deliver web music with the maximum possible quality, Designing Web Audio is the only book you'll need. (Bill Camarda)
Bill Camarda is a consultant and writer with nearly 20 years' experience in helping technology companies deploy and market advanced software, computing, and networking products and services. His 15 books include Special Edition Using Word 2000 and Upgrading & Fixing Networks For Dummiesยฎ, Second Edition.