Guitar practice, theory, etc.
There's a community for it but it's practically dead
Guitar practice, theory, etc.
There's a community for it but it's practically dead
A Tolkien based active community would be great. Reddit had/has a few that were fairly active. There are communities here but really not active at all.
Also wish the NBA community was more active - quite frankly surprised it's not.
I miss r/livesound. It was a fantastic resource and a very active community.
I would really like a community for Volkswagen cars with q&a on mechanical problems, tips etc so I can stop going to reddit
Digital signal processing
I.....think I may be interested in learning about that?
DSP (digital signal processing) is the field of applied mathematics and engineering dedicated to transforming and manipulating digital signals.
Examples of real digital signals include audio files, image files, video files, and digitized recordings of various physical quantities by computers like the configuration of a robot as it moves in time, measurements of the processes in a factory, the trajectory of a spacecraft — almost anything that can be periodically sampled and take on a finite set of values [1] can be seen as a digital signal.
DSP includes using tools like the Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT), the Z-transform, wavelet analysis, probability, statistics, and linear algebra to do things such as filter a signal (example: audio equalizer), predict future values (example: weather forecasting), data compression (example: JPEGs), system identification (example: fit a model of the earth to predict seismic activity), control (example: make a DC motor to respond to position commands), and stabilization (example: keep plane from "wanting" to smash into the ground). Particularly, it requires a careful consideration of the effect of sampling a signal (example: if done carelessly, you can make the sampled system unstable [read: explode]), as well as an interpolation process of some kind if you plan on using that signal outside your computer (example: you want to hear an audio signal stored on your computer).
I got into DSP because I was an audio engineer and musician [2], and I wanted to design my own audio plugins. IMO I think almost everyone would benefit from some knowledge of DSP, but the math is really intense. Personally, I found out late in life that I have a nearly infinite appetite for math, so it's a good fit for me.
Here's a playlist about DSP if you're interested.
[1] Actually, a lot of basic DSP books don't restrict the signal to be in a finite set because it makes the math easier if the signal could be any real number. However, certain structures that would be exactly equivalent in theory are not equivalent on a real computer because ordinary computer arithmetic is approximate.
[2] I still play music, but not as much as before engineering school.
Some sort of "Lemmy dev community" where devs hang out.
Something like the communities on the @programming.dev instance?
Sopranos Duckposting
Shitpostcrusaders
Miss the subreddits for all my favorite podcasts, Discord just isn't the same
Probably not very popular, I miss the culture of r/morbidquestions that was the place to go for most weird topics without much judgment.
Tbh I wish the Lego communities on Lemmy were more active, aside from critiquing the odd announcement for a new set.
communities
There are multiple?
checks lemmyverse.net
https://lemmyverse.net/communities?query=lego
Looks like there's a number, but that !lego@lemmy.world is the only one that has much going on.
I would like an opera community.
the singing or the browser?
Singing!
TV, movie and book discussion communities aren't very active around here.
The Pikmin community!
Hi there! Looks like you linked to a Lemmy community using a URL instead of its name, which doesn't work well for people on different instances. Try fixing it like this: !pikmin@lemm.ee
Pro Revenge. It's the only reason I watch those TTS Reddit YouTubers
Judo !
On reddit, there's a subreddit called r/lrcast, which is the dedicated subreddit for the Limited Resources podcast. The primary purpose of the subreddit, however, is not to discuss the podcast, but to discuss the "limited" format of Magic: the Gathering, which constitutes draft and sealed. It's a very difficult, very expensive format of Magic to play and is a niche subsection of an already fairly niche hobby.
Gore
A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions
If your post meets the following criteria, it's welcome here!
Looking for support?
Looking for a community?
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