http://www.2loop.com/hsound.html
That's not as engaging as the virtual Barbershop, but it does very well with above and below sound.
Well, clearly they have a great recording setup, right?
Probably, but my old laptop running Windows ME can do it on the fly to wav files:
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/16520690/soundMaxDemo.mp3
... But only for test purposes.
How in the world do we edit an existing sound file to get these spacial effects?
The internet is exceptionally vague on how sound localization works. It has something to do with pitches and notches. Throw in the word spectral, and that is literally the most detail I've been able to find.
This is one of those ironic instances where being able to see a waveform would probably help considerably.
"If you want utopia but reality gives you Lovecraft, you don't give up, you carve your utopia out of the corpses of dead gods."
MaxAngor wrote:
George... Don't do that.