Mon, 07 Feb 2011 22:15:27 -1000 письмо от david <gnome(a)hawaii.rr.com>om>:
No, I never have. I usually use JACK, and have never been able to make
Audacity work with JACK. I've only done the following things with
Audacity:
1. Import 16 tracks of 32-bit WAV files (recorded on another machine
from my church band's Firewire interface using some Windows software)
and do basic mixing.
2. Trim and cleanup voice audio recordings made on my PDA.
3. Trim and convert wave files recorded using jack_capture.
4. Pitch shift prerecorded MP3s if needed for band members who play
solely by ear (if the recording's in Eb and we're playing it in D,
they're lost).
If you have the time and brains needed to learn Ardour, go for it!
--
David
gnome(a)hawaii.rr.com
authenticity, honesty, community
_______________________________________________
Linux-audio-user mailing list
Linux-audio-user(a)lists.linuxaudio.org
http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user It is possible even, to make
Audacity a part of some processing chain. The only problem, that you get, is
synchronisation. Some example:
1. First of all - you need to enable devices toolbar, to switch recording and playback
source. Not, however, when you finished work, you should switch them back to what you have
always (most possible - "System", which is default in most cases), otherwise you
will need to get the same ports again before to start Audacity again, otherwise it will
fail to start.
2. Run jack-rack. Select it in Audacity both for input and output. Load some track.
3. Try to record something (i think, you already should understand, what is expected,
right?). You should get new track with data from first track, processed by JR.
More real example. When i tried to add one MP3 file to audacity by dragging, sometimes it
was loaded incorrectly - some parts was lost or modified in strange (for me) way.
Solution, i found, is to record it from audacious.
Anyway, in all these cases - recording in audacity should be started before to run
playback in other staff (i.e., before to start playback in audacious).