On Tuesday 18 January 2011 01:50:31 Joel Roth wrote: > On Mon, Jan 17, 2011 at 11:27:11PM +0000, Lisi wrote: > > On Monday 17 January 2011 22:30:11 Celejar wrote: > > > > I have also had another look at Audacity, as suggested. But there is > > > > just too much there that I simply don't understand. However, I shall > > > > return to it if I get nowhere with gnome-media. > > Audacity is generally easy to use, available on multiple > platforms, and is my first recommendation to people new to > audio processing. > > > > You might also take a look at mhwaveedit. Very simple, and not many > > > options, but it works well. > > Depending on your needs, and if the GUI waveform display isn't so important > you may like to experiment with Nama. (Nama does have a simple > Tk UI for controlling transport, effects, etc. with more advanced > features available at the command prompt.) > > Nama is Debian packaged. That version behaves reasonably well. > You can also easily update to the latest/greatest version > from github. > > http://freeshell.de/~bolangi/cgi1/nama.cgi/00home.html
Thanks very much, Joel. I'll take a look. But you illustrate my main problem very well. In this context, what are transport and special effects?? Well, I could possibly guess what special effects are, but "transport"??? I simply don't know enough about recording to be able to use and/or understand anything beyond start, stop, fast forward, rewind, record and save. And it would be nice to be able to see whether or not anything is being recorded! Lisi -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/201101180925.37451.lisi.re...@gmail.com