You move forward by pressing control plus t, and backwoards with
control plus L. If you find you cannot make fine enough ajustments,
try adjusting the amount of movement with the control comma and
control period keys. So press either of those once and try move back
and forth again and ajust as
Hi folks...i just got windows10.there's a program called...groove
musicit's if I can see...it's not that accessibleI'd love
wimamp to play my music again..
How do I fix this?
Yep either that or ctrl-t, you can also use other commands such as jump
to time etc, there are a whole host of commands available.
Also the instructions I gave are for Total Recorder Professional edition
and above.
On 9/20/2015 6:08 AM, john riehl wrote:
That's helpful, Dane; thanks. I
I'm trying to use a different editor - Goldwave - to edit my audio file. I
can move through the piece beautifully and get to the spot I want to edit; I
want to set a mark, go to the end of the file and delete everything in
between. I've tried using shift-E to set the mark and pressing "okay" on
If I recall, you use the mark start and mark end keystrokes to set the
boundaries. They are left and right bracker respectively. Once they are in
place, you should be able to delete the unwanted sound.
Dean
http://bahaiteachings.org/
-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio
First, I have a file I'm trying to edit with Total recorder. It's a .wav
file, so it should be editable. I start playing the file, then try to set a
begin and end of selection and then delete it, but that does not seem to
work.
What's the proper procedure for cutting out a snippet at the
Got to the beginning of the file, you can use ctrol-home or press the to
start button.
From here type shift-l, which sets the beginning of the selection.
Navigate to the end of the portion you wish to cut out of the file and
press shift-r which sents the end of the selection.
Press the
That's helpful, Dane; thanks. I mavigate to the point where I want to delete
by pressing the "right" button, correct?
-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Dane
Trethowan
Sent: Saturday, September 19, 2015 3:48 PM
To: PC Audio Discussion
John,
This is an incomplete answer, but two pointers:
WMP shows up in the "Program files X86" folder, which on my system is in the
root of the C drive. This may be why you didn't realize WMP was already there,
as it probably was. So, if you have Windows 7, go to Computer, then hard
drive,
Hi, everyone. I'm in a real fix and need some help.
I use Total Recorder to record all or parts of audio I'm playing, then save
the recordings to files for later use. I recorded part of a file a couple
of weeks ago and it played back fine. Last week I installed Windows Media
player, and now
What do you mean you installed Media Player? It comes with Windows. Unless
you actually mean Windows Media Center.
-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of john
riehl
Sent: Saturday, September 19, 2015 10:26 AM
To: 'PC Audio Discussion List'
The inability to close total recorder is a uia bug which effects both
Window-eyes and nvda. Nothing can be done unless Microsoft fixes that
bug, or someone finds a clever way around it.
Aidan wrote:
> You move forward by pressing control plus t, and backwoards with
>
g the file, but, in neither case
can I delete what I want to delete.
Thanks for your patience, everyone.
John riehl
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