Folks, this is to those of you who are using AUdio Hijack. I've been
corrisponding with Paul and trying to figure out a little issue with
adding in effects.
Here's the situation, lets say you setup a session to perhaps record
all the system sounds and you also want to add in the voiceover
plugin to talk along with your recording. First you'd click on the
effects tab and using VO-keys + right arrow you come to a scroll area
which I gather is some sort of grid deal where you click on it with
VO's simulated mouse click or the physical mouse click and you get a
menu where you can select your plugin/effect i.e. the aux output for
example. Now once you got that, you need to add in the voiceover
effect/plugin cause well you need that. Now going back to click on
the scroll area nothing happens for me. I think Hank said he had no
problem, but I have never had any real luck getting this to work for
me. I seem to recall the only way it did work is if I closed AUdio
Hijack Pro and then after relaunching, I could add the voiceover in
to the mix.
Well that isn't how I'd like to do things. Now an idea struck me, if
this is a grid deal as what I recall Paul saying, it stands to reason
that perhaps to add more effects you have to find a blank spot on
your grid to add the next item. I got to thinking and after a little
fiddling I figured out that if I held the physical mouse down like a
continuous click if you will, move the mouse forward a half inch or
so, and nearly at the same time use the VO-keys+shift+spacebar to get
the simulated click, I could activate the menu again. I was able to
reproduce this fairly consistantly. So, my question is does this make
sense, does someone know or found a better way to add effects, or am
I completely mad and suffering from effects of all the hot weather
we've been having lately.
To explain my grid thing more clearly, think of this scroll area as
having slots where you'd insert your effects and you have to use the
mouse to locate a blank spot to insert the effect as opposed to
putting it on top of the other. Geez, that probably doesn't help
much, but maybe you get the idea I'm trying to explain.
Ok, so any thoughts appreciated.
Scott
[EMAIL PROTECTED]