His second project is Speak to Me/Breathe. The look is great, for those who enjoy cardboard and magic marker, though we think some tonal variation and possibly a wider pitch variation would really make this fun. You create and loop your beats at the time of playing using simple hand gestures. First, the Beat boxxx, as seen in the video above, is an 80’s retro looking portable beat looper. is in the MFA Design and Technology program at parsons, and as part of his studies, has built a couple really interesting projects. Posted in Software Hacks, Video Hacks Tagged bleep, censoring, ffmpeg Beat Boxxx And Speak To Me/Breathe Considering that the point of the 1 kHz back-up alarm beep is to draw a person’s attention to a piece of heavy equipment moving about, there is clearly no good reason why the replacement of a naughty word should warrant a similar drawing of attention. This use of silence for censoring naughty words is incidentally becoming more commonplace over an ear-piercing beep, but a tool like Bleep-be-gone can be used to hasten the demise of its terror. Using a Perl-based wrapper, the versatile ffmpeg framework is used to filter a provided video that was afflicted with bleepitus, before outputting a pristine version where the infernal noise is replaced with blissful silence. There is thus a definite argument to be made to censor the censoring beep to preserve one’s sanity, which is the goal of ’s Bleep-be-gone project on GitHub. Although ostensibly applied to prevent susceptible minds from being exposed to the unspeakable horrors of naughty words, the applied 1 kHz censoring tone is decidedly loud and obnoxious enough that its entertainment level falls somewhere between ‘truck backing up’ and ‘loud claxon in busy traffic’. One of the more interesting cultural phenomena is the ‘bleep’ that replaces certain words in broadcasts, something primarily observed in the US.
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