Hi, gary. I don't mean whatyou mean by quieting.
You can check your levels in goldwave.
On 7/4/2015 12:19 PM, Gary Petraccaro wrote:
Doesn't have quieting is a killer for me. Goldwave has that but all
the talk said that it was inferior when I was buying. The other issue
was level tracking which SF did better than Goldwave back then. Has
it caught up?
Thanks.
----- Original Message ----- From: "tim cumings" <thcumi...@comcast.net>
To: "PC Audio Discussion List" <pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Wednesday, July 01, 2015 8:00 AM
Subject: Re: Review: Sony Creative Software Sound Forge Pro 11 -
Studio Daily
If you are looking for a program on the pc side that is a good editor
I use golswave. Despite opinions to the dcontrary, you can make just
as tight edits in goldave as ou can in sound forge. I think a lot of
it is simply what hyou are used to in terms of an editor. Jonathan
Mosen, for example, who used to be a big proponent of sound forge,
told me recently that on the pc side he now uses studio recorder for
most of his pc editing needs. Now studio recorder doesn't have all
the bells and whistle that sound forge does, noise reduction, ability
to use plug-ins, etc, but for just plain editing it apparently works
very well.
.
On 7/1/2015 12:48 AM, Dane Trethowan wrote:
I don't know whether we're talking along the same lines but I know
that I can write each channel of a surround-sound recording to
different files.
On 1/07/2015 1:28 PM, Hamit Campos wrote:
All though Reaper can open surround sound files right? Can you
break them with it too like with SF?
-----Original Message-----
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of
Dane Trethowan
Sent: Tuesday, June 30, 2015 8:50 PM
To: PC Audio Discussion List
Subject: Re: Review: Sony Creative Software Sound Forge Pro 11 -
Studio Daily
The other problem here also seems to be blind loyalty - pardon the
pun -, people buy a product - in this case Sound Forge -, they've
spent so much money on the product so therefore they're hoping
beyond hope that everything will work as it did in Sound Forge 4.5
and they're not looking to try anything new even though times and
software are a changing and that's unfortunate as those people miss
out on anything that actually works.
Sony Creative Software have never been interested in accessibility
and I doubt they ever will be whereas other products have come
along where the developers are interested in accessibility and take
note of user feedback, there's a lot of competition out there.
A classic case in point is Sonar, I know someone who spent
literally thousands over time on Sonar this and Sonar that,
upgrades and all the rest of it.
I encouraged him to try Reaper and.. well.. he wished he'd known
about it earlier and he's furious with himself for spending a
fortune on Sonar, of course its not his fault but I do give him
credit for having the courage to try another product and just not
blindly follow on.
Finally, I doubt whether 99% of Sound Forge Pro users - whether
Blind or Sighted - would even use a quarter of the functions
offered so we're back to square one, why spend so much money?
On 29/06/2015 5:34 PM, Brian Hartgen wrote:
I agree that Amadeus Pro is ideal on the Mac side, I've used it
and it works very well.
On Windows, in terms of serious audio production without vision,
there is nothing that beats Sound Forge V8 if you can get it, V9
and above have serious accessibility issues in my view and,
despite me reporting these to Sony, they've not been fixed.
On Windows, for multi-track work I use Sonar 8.5. Again, it's
excellent and allows you to be very precise in terms of achieving
a good overall balance of tracks. I like to be very precise with
my editing, and Sonar does not quite give me the flexibility that
Sound Forge does, but we do use Sonar a lot.
Brian Hartgen
Hartgen Consultancy
www.hartgen.org
Phone UK: 02920-850298.
Phone US: 415-871-0626
JAWS Certified, 2015.
-----Original Message-----
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of
Dane Trethowan
Sent: Monday, June 29, 2015 4:55 AM
To: PC Audio Discussion List <pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Subject: Re: Review: Sony Creative Software Sound Forge Pro 11 -
Studio Daily
If you’re just relying on Sound Forge to record with a simple
keystroke then you’re money is well and truly wasted<smile>, Total
Recorder for example records at the touch of a keystroke, just
type ctrl-r from within the Application or set up a global hotkey
to record from anywhere.
I’ve not played with Sound Forge Pro for a very long time, Audio
Studio does me so I’m wondering just how many of the “Visual”
features in Sound Forge Pro 11 a person without sight can make use
of?
If you want to know what my favourite audio package is - for
recording, editing, multi track recording and just about
everything else to do with audio - then its undoubtedly Amadeus Pro.
On 29 Jun 2015, at 1:41 pm, Hamit Campos <hamitcam...@gmail.com>
wrote:
Epic, I've tried it. It's so easy to record with it. 1 keystroke
and you're capturing.
I love it. Can't wait for them to upgrade Audio Studio.
-----Original Message-----
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of
Dane Trethowan
Sent: Sunday, June 28, 2015 8:07 PM
To: PC Audio Discussion List
Subject: Review: Sony Creative Software Sound Forge Pro 11 - Studio
Daily
http://www.studiodaily.com/2013/10/review-sound-forge-pro-11/
--
**********
Those who need help are those who are prepared to help themselves
**********
Those of a positive and enquiring frame of mind will leave the
rest of the halfwits in this world behind.