On 12/8/03 11:46 AM, Allen Watson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> On or near 12/7/03 6:21 PM, Allen Watson at [EMAIL PROTECTED] observed:
> 
>> I have not tried it, but I'm curious what you are using to convert the
>> software. There's an app called Sound Converter...do you use that? It
>> handles ten different formats.
> 
> I just tried extracting a sound from a sound set. I then used "Sound Studio"
> (in demo mode; it costs) to save it as a TIFF file, which I then opened in
> iTunes and played. So, Sound Studio will do the job. Sound Converter didn't
> recognize the extracted file.

Do you mean AIFF - which is a standard audio format? TIFF is an image
format. 

I've found that AIFF files are sometimes recognized as System sounds only
when they have the .aiff extension and are sometimes recognized only when
they have the .aif extension. Create two AIFF files, give one the
three-letter extension and the other the four-letter extension. Put them
both in ~/Library/Sounds and then check SpamSieve to see if either shows up.

Another way you can check their playability is to not double-click on the
files, but rather to view them in column mode. The preview pane will say
whether or not it's an AIFF audio file and will give you a QuickTime bar
that lets you play the sound.

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