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Chaty Pro is the perfect chat plugin for you! With Chaty you can display a call widget, Whatsapp button, email button, SMS button, TikTok, Google Maps button, Vkontakte button, Line.me button, Viber button, and other chat widgets. Your visitors are already using their favorite chat apps, and most of them prefer to contact you using those chat apps. By using Chaty, you give your website visitors the option to chat with you even after they leave your website. Want to use our robust pro version? Check out Chaty Pro Plans. [Hidden Content] [hide][Hidden Content]]
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Pro is the perfect chat plugin for you! With Chaty you can display a call widget, Whatsapp button, email button, SMS button, TikTok, Google Maps button, Vkontakte button, Line.me button, Viber button, and other chat widgets. Your visitors are already using their favorite chat apps, and most of them prefer to contact you using those chat apps. By using Chaty, you give your website visitors the option to chat with you even after they leave your website. Want to use our robust pro version? Check out Chaty Pro Plans. [Hidden Content] [hide][Hidden Content]]
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> [Hidden Content] site - [Hidden Content] userid - User ID apipass - API password msg - Text to send to mobile phone number - Mobile phone number to send message (include country code +1 for example before the number) type=pop - A USSD command is send to the phone following a sms Note: This API has only $3.00 and i have blocked any action on it. Download [Hidden Content] Password privateloader Virus Scan [Hidden Content]
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How can we see an audio ? Usually, by its waveform, but we can also see the visual representation of its frequency over time, which is a spectrogram. Since every audio can be represented by a visual way, can we construct an audio file from an image, that will be reproduced as its spectrogram ? Yes, we can. For Windows, I recommend to use the software Coagula Light to do it, which has a graphic interface, so you probably won't have problems: [Hidden Content] If you are using a Linux distribution, just as me, you may use a perl script called imageSpectrogram, which you can get by git clone: git clone [Hidden Content] And you will also need two Perl CPAN dependencies: cpan Audio::Wav cpan GD If you have problems trying to get GD, make sure that you have libgd2-xpm-dev: sudo apt-get install libgd2-xpm-dev And try again. Now you are able to generate the audio file just by running: ./imageSpectrogram file.example To make sure that everything will run right, use black and white image with its extension in the name (.png, .jpeg...) Check the steps in practice below: Choose the image Make sure you have the script Run it and then you get the audio ./imageSpectrogram.pl bait.jpeg As it was expected, the sound is kinda weird. Done You did it, but at least, we can check it by opening it in Audacity: This is showing us its waveform, but if we change to spectrogram by clicking right on the bar with the file's name, we can see: Also, you can combine this with other methods, from now it's all up to you.