← Back to context Comment by o11c 2 days ago Title misses important context: "for sound" 5 comments o11c Reply galangalalgol 1 day ago A lot of it applies to software defined radio processing as well, other than tending to work in real vs complex, but you can always do either. munificent 1 day ago For any one-dimensional signal, honestly.Audio is just the most common use case. sfpotter 1 day ago Vast majority of this book covers DSP in very broad generality, much akin to what you would see in an undergrad EE course on the topic. Compare with Oppenheim and Schafer. Different focus but much of the same content. Blackthorn 1 day ago Without loss of generality. monster_truck 1 day ago Do you think that's air you're breathing
galangalalgol 1 day ago A lot of it applies to software defined radio processing as well, other than tending to work in real vs complex, but you can always do either.
munificent 1 day ago For any one-dimensional signal, honestly.Audio is just the most common use case.
sfpotter 1 day ago Vast majority of this book covers DSP in very broad generality, much akin to what you would see in an undergrad EE course on the topic. Compare with Oppenheim and Schafer. Different focus but much of the same content.
A lot of it applies to software defined radio processing as well, other than tending to work in real vs complex, but you can always do either.
For any one-dimensional signal, honestly.
Audio is just the most common use case.
Vast majority of this book covers DSP in very broad generality, much akin to what you would see in an undergrad EE course on the topic. Compare with Oppenheim and Schafer. Different focus but much of the same content.
Without loss of generality.
Do you think that's air you're breathing