Love mysteries? we have got one for you to solve and it is called Town of Salem. It is actually BlankMediaGame’s latest RPG Town of Salem that holds the big mystery. It is a multiplayer murder mystery and tests how good you are at lying and at the same time detecting the lies of others. Though released for Android and iOS platforms, you can also play Town of Salem on your PCs and Laptops. For your ease, we have put together the instructions to help you download and install Town of Salem for PC (Windows and Mac). While playing, at an instance, 7 to 15 players can join and showcase their skills. Playing the game on big screens will enable you to focus even the minute details, which help figure out if someone is lying.
Upon joining the game, the players are divided randomly into categories such as Town, Mafia, Serial Killers, Arsonists, and Neutrals. If you are aligned with the Town members, your goal would be to reveal the identities of Serial Killers and other villains before they kill you. Similarly, if you are on the other end, like Serial Killers, your goal will be to kill the Town members and avoid getting caught. The interesting thing is that no one knows what roles are assigned to the players. This leaves you with your skills and intuition and how quickly you debunk the mystery of other alignments. Like the gameplay, Town of Salem features high-end graphics and realistic sound effects.
Lastly, Town of Salem is free and you can install it easily on your Android devices via play store. Follow the instructions if you want to install Town of Salem on Windows XP, 7, 8, 10 running PC/Laptops and OS X powered MacBook/iMac without further ado.
Download and Install Town of Salem for PC – Windows & Mac
Soul hunt download for mac os. Your browser does not support WebGL OK.
- First, download and install the Android Emulator of your choice, here’s how you can Install Android Emulators to run Apps for PC.
- After successfully downloading and setting up the Emulator, launch it.
- Now in the first row of installed apps, look for Google play store search menu.
- Upon locating the search menu type, Town of Salem to get Google play store’s search results.
- From the search results, select Town of Salem and click on it to initiate the installation.
- Once the installation is complete, you’ll find Town of Salem in All Apps section.
- That’s it, just click on Town of Salem to run it on big screens.
Download and Install Town of Salem for PC – Windows & Mac First, download and install the Android Emulator of your choice, here’s how you can Install Android Emulators to run Apps for PC. After successfully downloading and setting up the Emulator, launch it. Town of Salem is a fresh innovation on the classic party games Mafia and Werewolf. It is a game of murder, accusations, deceit and mob hysteria. Town of Salem takes place in the era of the Salem witch trials in an alternate universe version of Salem, MA. Town of Salem is a Flash game. Nulled is a community where you can find tons of great leaks, make new friends, participate in active discussions and much more. Town of Salem, free and safe download. Town of Salem latest version: Who's The Villain? Who Lives And Who Dies? Town of Salem is an online multiplayer game where you take one of 33 roles in a game of 7 to 15 p.
Download and Install Town of Salem for PC via Apk file
- Before proceeding with this method make sure you have Android Emulator installed on your PC. Here’s how to install Android Emulators.
- Now download Town of Salem for PC apk.
- Once the download is complete, navigate the folder containing Town of Salem apk.
- After locating the apk file, double-click it to initiate the installation. You can also open the file via Emulator as well.
- When installed, you’ll find Town of Salem in All Apps section.
- Simply click on it to launch it on big screens.
In case you are facing any issue, let us know in the comments section below.
Project Page: 'Allyou ever needed to run a FM-radio, but never dared to ask for as OSS / FreeSoftware: studio automation, scheduling etc. Pointing to what's already outthere, trying to build what's not.'By the way: In May 2005 'Ask Slashdot'featured the questions 'Has anyone used Linux to run a radio station before?Can anyone suggest a F/OSS software package or solution?' And In May 2007 at the same place answers flocked in to the question 'Migrating a Radio Station to Linux?'
Automation -good or bad?
Sure, you may very well think bad about todays mainlyvery strong formatted radios. At least most of the commercial ones sound allvery much alike. This is made possible mainly through automation of musicselection and transmission.The responsible people make once a decision,how a station should sound, define its profile through accordingly settingthe structure of the music in the clocks.
The clocks say exactly forevery song / audio clip in every hour, what criteria it has to meet (like:start with a present hit, then play an oldie then a jazz piece from the70ies and so forth).
and that's basically it. now you fill music intothe repertoire, you add information about every piece in a database and outof this, the scheduler produces a playlist for the station, followingstrictly the rules of the defined clocks.
in the studio you will have acomputer of some kind, that has access to the soundfiles. it either playsone after the other, with possible overlaps for smooth transitions ifnecessary. or it is coupled with a mixer and its fader-start-feature: whenyou lift a fader, it sends the connected sound source the signal to startplaying. so you can have unattended radio, nobody there but the computer. oryou can have the computer-setup help your radio-people.
Buying thisstuff involves amounts of money mostly unavailable to small radios. But seenas a tool, automation can help small radios in their work too. Automationdoesn't lead necessarily to bad, boring programs. It may help free thepeople to concentrate on producing content and transmit the content in amore professional sounding way. Not a bad thing, is it?
Elements
The basic necessary elements are:- a practical way to move eitheralready digital or digitized sound into the stations repertoire
- anaudio editor to cut, mix etc. the digitized audio
- a database ofinformation about the soundfiles in the repertoire
- a scheduler thatproduces a playlist according to the rules set by the clock editor
- a clock editor that sets the rules for the scheduler
- aninterface for the DJs / presenters in the on-air-studio
- softwarethat plays the digital audio in the sequence that the playlist prescribes -either fully unattended, or under control by the DJs / presenters. It has tobe able to play at least two files simultanously, needed for radiolikecrossfades at the end of one audiofile, when the next starts. For assistingto work, we have to connect the 'fader-start' contacts of a mixer with ouron-air-computer: lifting the fader away from the bottom gives the signal toinstantly start playing the next audiofile.
- (thanks Andrew) a logger: 'It needs to produce a set of logs that wouldsatisfy the FCC. (Federal Communications Commission is the USA governmentorganization that regulates broadcast) What played, when it played, andprint/no print option once a day is quite important. Because in the USgovernment officials can walk into your station and demand to see logs. Ifyou can't produce them, you're finished!'
- (thanks again, Andrew): satellite capability: 'The other critical pieceof automation that needs to be there in order to make a serious stab at realradio markets is satellite capability. The system needs to be able tomonitor an RS-232 data stream (low bandwidth) and then use what it seesthere to control audio inputs and/or an RS-422 input. If you can do thatreliably to where you can put satellite programs in your scheduler withcommands from the RS-232 able to effect program changes - now that would bebig time.'
Look around
The million dollar question is: What is already there as free software, andwhat do we miss? I grabbed these links mainly at Dave Phillips List of Sound & MIDI Software forLinux . It's really very useful, thanks Dave! His pages are nowavailable at the following sites:linuxsound.at (Europe)
linuxsound.ymo.org (Japan)
sound.condorow.net (USA)
linuxsound.bright.net(USA)
Others with similar intentions
- August 10 2011: Sourcefabric just e-mailed to me that they released 1.9 of its extremely promising 'Airtime' ('the open radio software for scheduling and remote station management'). That's the tool used by stations like openbroadcast in Switzerland.
- On january 6 2010 I heard of the lithuanian station 'Start FM'. They are using rivendell and write about it on their blog:
'Start FM' is using only Open Source software.The radio of the Vilnius University 'Start FM' (VUR SFM) can now be called not only the independent music pioneers in Lithuania. After system testing and fine-tuning, that took all the summer period the station has become the first airwave radio in Lithuani using only Open Source software.The switch to Open Source/Free software was one of the main parts of the stations technological reforms. This allowed to enhance the functionality as well as the sound quality, system stability and the convenience of managing the broadcast. The radio station is now independent and is not locked up in the studio by any means. High quality radio broadcasts can now be made from any part of the world. We can now truly say that the station is open, innovative and free [..]. The new radio stations broadcasting control system is working on Linux and Unix OS environments and is using rivendell radio automation system. [..] The radio station of the Vilnius University is the first non-commercial and the only one that is playing only independent music. You can hear the station on 94.2MHz FM in Lithuania or online.
- On Sunday, October 18 2009, Marius e-mailed me about his Project:
I'm working on a free radio automation solution for Windows named RadioDJ. Currently it's not complete, but i hope that soon will be ready for beta stage.
Sounds promising! So you might take a look at it!
A few features of RadioDJ:- Custom song and jingle rotations wich can be loaded and saved anytime
- AutoDJ function, based on category and subcategory rotation
- Manual or auto advance for the playlist tracks
- Unlimited categories and subcategories for your music, jingles, sweepers etc
- Unobstructive cue points for any track (start, intro, preview in, preview out, outro and end)
- Automatically overlap sweepers over intro
- Advanced scheduler for events (radio shows, advertisments etc)
- On march 13 2008 I received this mail from Erasmo Alonso Iglesias: 'I'm happy to announce you the appearing of a new open source radio automation system, ARAS.ARAS is a highly configurable radio automation system, it runs as a daemon, it is able to load the configuration at runtime and it currently works as scheduler.'
- On June 26 2007 I received a mail from Emile Bassil, where he wrote: 'Hi Patrik, I am an Australian developer who has written a radio automation software in .NET for the Windows platform. The software is free (no commercial version and no feature limitation) to download and use.' Sounds very promising. I haven't tested it, but maybe you feel like giving it a try? Go ahead!
Recently I stumbled across the software coming out of reboot.fm, which looks like itoffers on-air, online and on-demand functionality, combined withdecentralized contribution and transmission. Coming from Berlin.- February 16 2005 bedlam mailed: 'I contribute to a project called mediabox404 which aim is to provide a powerful web interface to automate playlist creation, programing, liveact and so on for webradios. It is now 100% GPL and public since 10 Februar 2005. The website is for now in French, but we're working hard to open it inEnglish very soon. Please take a look ! URL : MediaBox404.' I'dsay: Give it a try!
- January 12 2005 Jeremy Lees-Green informed me about
LiveSupportCampcaster, to be released on February 1 2005, which sounds VERY promising in itsselfdescription:- LiveSupport is being made by an internationalconsortium of developers and designers led by the Media Development LoanFund's Center for Advanced Media Prague (CAMP) as part of its CampwareInitiative. LiveSupport's lead developer is Akos Maroy, who, in addition tobeing the webmaster for Tilos Radio in Budapest, Hungary, is the author ofDarkIce, an open-source streaming tool. He is joined by PHP developersSebastian Goebel and Tomas Hlava. LiveSupport's functionality specificationand input on real-world applications in radio was written by Robert Klajn,the sound engineer for Radio B92 in Belgrade, Serbia. Project coordinationiis being handled by Micz Flor of Redaktion und Alltag, a Berlin-based webpublishing house. LiveSupport's user interface is being designed by a teamfrom the New York's Parsons Institute of Design's Design and TechnologyDepartment, led by chair Colleen Macklin and IT Director Kunal Jain, withmaster of fine arts candidates Catalin Lazia, Turi McKinley, Sangita Shahand Charles Truett. The team has focused on building use-case scenarios forLiveSupport's features, as a way of providing better grouping of softwarefunctions and the interfaces for them. Funding for LiveSupport has beengenerously provided by a grant from the Open Society Institute's InformationProgram, through its ICT Toolsets initiative.
On december 26 2004 I received an e-mail from Andy Olivares who pointedme to his emuSICK Project (the same day it saw its first release). About this, he writes on its website: 'emuSICK isa multiplatform radio automation system based in HardData DineSat product. This project has been created entirely in C++ and QT from Trolltech. For thesound engine we have selected the greatest sound engine we could find. I'mtalking about FMOD project. (..) As this project is based on QT's API it ismultiplatform, so you should be able to compile and use it under Windows,Linux, Machintosh and any other OS supported by the QT Framework and FMODlibrary.' So this looks like another project on a veryinteresting path!- Can it be true? Are we almost there? Robert Ambrose, General Managerof KTNA in Talkeetna, Alaska, today (june 23 2004) mailed this: 'Hi. Saw your site. Have you checked out Rivendell? I just got this at a small community station and am committed to replacing the windozebased network and broadcast software with open source. Rivendell seems to be the most complete package.' Really looks very promising! Check it out, I'drecommend! They describe themselves as: 'Rivendell aims to be a completeradio broadcast automation solution, with the facilities for theacquisition, management, scheduling and playout of audio content. As arobust, functionally complete digital audio system for broadcast radioapplications, Rivendell uses industry standard components like the GNU/LinuxOperating System, the AudioScience HPI Driver Architecture and the MySQLDatabase Engine. Rivendell is being developed under the GNU PublicLicense.'.
Head of software development for Rivendell is Frederick Gleason Jr.
Interestingpoint: Rivendell comes out of thesalemradiolab, which is a part of Salem. Salem says about itself: 'Salem Communications Corporation isthe leading provider of radio programming, online resources and magazinestargeted to the Christian and family themes audience. For over 25 years ourcore business has been the ownership and operation of radio stations inmajor U.S. markets.'
On their support page I read: 'Support is currentlyonly available for radio stations owned and operated by Salem Communications Corporation.' Does this mean, we have here a wholenetwork of radios, being run with a GNU/GPL radio broadcastautomation solution? - Then we have here the italian SomaProject: 'The object of the technicalresearch was a digital environment, which could let individuals or wholecommunities gain access to a common schedule with resumes, repetitions,deferred programs, live broadcastings, regular broadcastings as one nationaland international network. Soma could satisfy this need and could be easly managed through the webthanks to somadmin, which could update the soma admin in real time.'
another italian project:Znap. 'Znap is a small c/python network mixingdaemon. It can load streams supported by fmod library (ogg/mp3/wav..) andmix them together. Can be controlled via Tcp or XmlRpc. Future releaseswill provide playlist/db and scheduling capabilities making it able to actlike a radio automation software.'- Jason Schindler of the 'Stewie Radio Automation Project' just (june 20 2004) wrote: 'I was just emailing you again to let you know that I have a much more usable version available for download now at thisURL.'
David A. Gatwood is making progress with SongCue, a set of programs, which will oneday maybe fullfill almost all needs..- Free Radio J (sic!)lives at sourceforge as well and wants do all in Java (J!). Recentlyreleased first files!
Guinever / Arthurhave their home at sourceforge as well and want to do it in Visual Basic forthe win-platform. No files released yet.Radio Free Linuxwants to do it in Perl, is at home in sourceforge-town, and has no filesreleased yet either.- Geek Radio uses mainlyPHP to set up a browser-controllable Radio that even reads out News etc.automatically with a computerized voice. Pretty geeky!
Radio Linux is anitalian project, aiming at the same as r.o.s.s. and shares its fact that ithas not released any files yet..AutoPlay DJ works with Perland Java, lives at sourceforge, and has no files released yetVibecast looks verypromising as well - and has files released last time about a year ago..that you can get via CVS, others result in error 404.- AutoRadio residesat sourceforge, wants to run on Win2000, feeding from C++, Visual Basic andASP, looks like it is of swiss origin, as it is related with Radio M24.ch.
- Now MuSE sounds definitively like something totry. They write about themselves: 'MuSE is an application for the mixing,encoding, and network streaming of sound. MuSE can simultaniously mix up to6 encoded audio bitstreams (from files or network) plus a souncard inputsignal. The resulting stream can be played locally on the sound card and/orencoded as an mp3 bitstream sended to a broadcast server. MuSE offers anintuitive interface to be operated realtime and can run in 'batch' mode orreceiving remote commands thru network.'
- Then Ricky Thomas pointed me to Radio Free Asias's Broadcast OpenDevelopment Exchange Initiative, which claims to be 'an open plattform tofreely exchange information and technical development for the professionalbroadcast community'. And further down they say: 'Radio Free Asia (RFA) wascreated by the U.S. government (..) RFA is a 100%digital facility in Washington D.C. (..)'. They have an impressing list offree software available! really worth checking out! a small starting pointto what i wrote down in Vision..
- Grant Petersen had another very helpful link: The UnattendedBroadcasting System, UBS. This comes from WMHD 90.7 FM which is a student runorganization and broadcast facility on the campus of Rose-Hulman Instituteof Technology in Terre Haute, IN. Grant is not involved in it, but says, UBS is anactive project and - after his trials - considers it working.
- Tom Brook pointed me to his FRUK, Free RadioUK, Site. Although running on Windows ;-), this selfdescription sounds very promising: 'Free Radio UK (FRUK)originally started as a private online radio station for a group of internetusers who shared the same tastes in music. As interests grew of how thesystem could be modified and enhanced, FRUK evolved to develop software toremotely run the radio station, and to automate the entire process if therewasn't a DJ available.' And, yes, there is a free version. But it has itsown non-GPL-licence.
- AGNULA, the once EU-financed project for a GNU/Linux Audio distribution says about itself:
AGNULA's main task will be the development of two referencedistributions for the GNU/Linux operating system completely based on FreeSoftware (i.e. under a FSF approved Free Software license) and completelydevoted to professional and consumer audio applications and multimediadevelopment. One distribution will be Debian-based (DeMuDi) and the otherwill be Red Hat-based (ReHMuDi). Both will be available on the network fordownload and on CD.
The following table should give a first idea, where the holes are,concerning radio, if looked at the elements individually:
use | status | link |
---|---|---|
MP3 encoders | existing | List ofthese |
CD-ripper | existing | link |
DBMS | existing | mySQL |
audio recorder | existing | List ofthese |
audio editor | existing | List ofthese |
multitrack harddisk recorder and editor | kind of existing | List ofthese Audacity, the GNU GPL multiplatform (linux, freebsd, windows, macos,osx) multitrack (unlimited tracks) harddiskeditor / -recorder |
scheduler | coming in | as a part of SongCue |
clock editor, setting the rules for the scheduler | inexistent | no link |
realtime mp3-mixer | existing | Emixer (not eXmixer) DBMix (Wow!!!) GDAM looks goodas well! mixplayd is a daemon that can betold to play mp3/2 files using mpg123 and be controlled via telnet - looksvery promising for the problem of crossfading between songs! |
frontend for on-air-studio(s) | coming | Exmixer (see below) and SongCue |
frontend for production studio(s) | coming | SongCue |
interface to multiline studio-mixer or a digital alternative | great! it's almost there!!!! | Exmixer(not emixer) found via dbmix - see a little further up. Exmixer is an external Box withanalog Faders to control the digital software-mixer DBMix. We are gettingcloser!!!! There are two pictures of Simon Werners exmixer. Theoutside, and theinside. |
logger | inexistent | - |
satellite interface | inexistent | - |
varia others that come close to our needs, but miss some basicsfor 'real' radio | existent | Paloma rips,manages and plays DigitalDJ is anSQL-based mp3-player frontend. This looks very nice! Mp3Commander is a program for searching and playing mp3 collections. The GlobeCom Jukeboxis the perfect tool to coordinate your music. rips, manages and plays etc.has Webinterface. Description sounds great! Has accounts. Jukebox is a niftyJukebox-system based on mySQL, apache and perl with a Webinterface. Serves alot of songs in a germaninternetcaffe at Regensburg, north of Munich. |
Existing commercial solutions
There are a lot! Because more or less every radio needs an automation thisis a pretty big market. Here are just a few ones:- A long List ofAutomation Systems, that most have a scheduler with them
- A not so long list ofschedulers only
- A Big German Player in the field, Management Data Media Systems, who bymid-july 2001 announced its bancruptcy
Contact me, Patrik Tschudin, at ptschudin@users.sourceforge.net
Things I am involved in:
Radio X, a small communityradio in Basel, Switzerland, of which I am a co-founder
in.f.a.m. mediaburo, a collective ofprofessional freelance journalists
swiss public radio drs2, the artsand culture channel - that's the guys who pay my rent for the work I do at aprogram about cultural and scientific news, called DRS2aktuell
and by the way: if you use the Sourceforge search and look for 'radio' and'automation' you'll find others who have similar plans
Town Of Salem Download Apk
Vision
All clever minds around radio and GNU/linux (or any other free software) put together their knowledge, eachaccording to his / her capabilities, and - initially funded by a group ofpublic broadcasters from all over the world (who fight with theirproprietary automation systems a lot too) - create a scalable, secure,flexible, adaptable (etc. pp.) free, open source based radio automationsystem. Why 'public broadcasters'? They might have more experience inshareing ressources and information, not being direct competitors against eachother, than private players do. And they have a kind of obligation to serve thepublic. Why not once on a (radio-)technical level?News
Town Of Salem Download For Mac Download
Now finally there is something! Using and hacking around with mixplayd and Jukebox I got my webbased jukeboxdoing sensible overlapping of songs. If you dare, you can get the necessaryfiles HERE.But really beware, you have been warned! This is only a messy, unclean first release, full ofgerman variables and Radio X specifics, meant more to prove that there is something moving herethan to offer an out-of-the-box-solution!!! expect many changes soon. butlook at it - if you really have to..To be honest: I am amazed that already 319 downloads of my 'messy'release happened.. up to now (june 9 2004).
interesting Articles
- LinuxJournal: Helping Broadcast Radio withLinux
- WiKi, started in the aftermath of the above article: RadioStation/ --Linux-controlled broadcast radio station system