Yup. I typically record in AIFF 44.1KHz mono which is CD quality.
Apparently the free Audio Recorder app I use will go up to 192kHz but my
input isn't that high a quality anyway. Mostly just spoken voice. Also,
when you make a new QT container to paste into you can save it as either
self-contained or as a reference movie. The reference will be tiny as
all it does it point to pieces of the original file. Of course that
means you have to keep the original around, but you can make multiple
versions all pointing to the original without eating up disk space.
CB
Dan wrote:
Hello,
I've done a little basic editing cut and paste in both audio and video.
For example, in one recording I had a segment where there was a fair
amount of noise such as coughing. This is what I did. I played the
recording till I got to a spot just prior to the coughing. I pressed
the space bar to pause the playback. Then I held down Shift, Option
and Command. While holding these down, I pressed the space bar to
restart playback. Then just after the segment I wanted to cut, I
released Shift, Option and Command. Without doing anything else, I hit
Command X to cut the section. Then I pressed the Go to Beginning and
replayed the recording and it had a clean edit, I couldn't tell where
the coughing was, but for the fact that I knew that was where it was.
This is just an example. I've also pasted in segments from other
recordings.
One word of advice. If you are going to do any editing on either Audio
or Movies, I suggest you set the recording to Native. This is under
the preferences under the Recording button. This is a real high bit
rate, but it allows for smooth editing. Later you can use other
programs to resample if you want.
This has been my experience so far with QuickTime Pro.
HTH.
Dan
On May 8, 2008, at 5:33 PM, vashaun jones wrote:
Hey, you can cut and paste video movies with QuickTime Pro? Please
tell me this is true!
On May 8, 2008, at 5:18 PM, Dan wrote:
Hi Chris,
Thanks,
I purchased it and it does what I need. The basic cut and paste
editing works just fine.
Dan
On May 8, 2008, at 2:06 PM, Chris Blouch wrote:
For me my company paid for it so it was worth it :) I was using it
to take video captures and convert them to something that could be
handled by a photosensitivity and epilepsy analysis tool which
would only accept AVI cinepak.
http://trace.wisc.edu/peat/
CB
Dan wrote:
Hello Chris,
Thanks for responding.
Are all the audio recording functions clearly available to VO users?
I suppose my next question is subjective, but...
Do you think it's worth the price?
Thanks,
Dan
On Apr 24, 2008, at 2:19 PM, Chris Blouch wrote:
I can't say whether ALL functions are available but I can select
a range to cut and paste into a new move and play with the EQ
etc. Is there anything you'd like me to try? I did have to do the
VO-F2 twice to pick the eq window. Apparently it isn't a 'real'
window that I could just switch to via Apple-~.
CB
Dan wrote:
Hello,
Is anyone using QuickTime Pro 7? If so, after purchase, are all
the functions available to VO users? For example Editing
functions and the EQ.
Thanks in advance.
Dan