yatm 0.8-1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

yatm (0.8-1) unstable; urgency=low


  * New upstream release (Closes: Bug#611530, Bug#697947, Bug#704894).
  * Replace cdbs with debhelper.

 -- Mario Lang <email address hidden>  Mon, 16 Sep 2013 18:48:44 +0200

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Mario Lang
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Mario Lang
Architectures:
any
Section:
sound
Urgency:
Low Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Trusty release universe sound

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File Size SHA-256 Checksum
yatm_0.8-1.dsc 1.0 KiB 8afe808eec864e2b17c43036eecafd55f394abfdbb4370fa88f3c32f86b2a605
yatm_0.8.orig.tar.gz 16.1 KiB 83202476c8ea6b67c3c51a4b29ec3ec76d009d6a96ae936a0df97920a3437ce0
yatm_0.8-1.diff.gz 1.5 KiB 27c8c9ecf2b83b988f67c8d184c8f2391f689e459a7daa563c52ed3da19ca1b1

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Binary packages built by this source

yatm: Command line audio file player with time stretching capabilities

 Yatm (Yet Another Time Machine) is a very simple command line audio player.
 Its main purpose is to play audio files at a different tempo while retaining
 the original sounds pitch. This is very useful for listening to audiobooks
 at a slightly higher speed than they were originally recorded with. It can
 also be helpful when listening to musical passages at a slower speed to
 be able to distinguish the different notes more easily.
 .
 Changing the pitch while keeping the tempo is also supported. Musical
 cents and semitones can be used to specify pitch change. This makes it
 easy to use for musicians. The notes you have are in G but the recording
 you'd like to play along with is in F? No problem, transpose the recording
 up two semitones. You'd like to play along with this baroque recording
 that uses original pitch? Just tune the music up about 80 cents and you
 should be fine.