I used audacity recently and it seems to work fine. The only downside is I think it uses wxWindows, which I hate, but I've even installed that to run it...
Nick/ On Thursday 24 Oct 2002 9:23 pm, you wrote: > >> Does it have a built in Wave editor? > > > >No. > > Depends :) > > The editor will let you cut up, trim, gain-control, splice > and crossfade audio. > > It doesn't allow sample-level "pencil" style manipulation, > and you can't write new data in the trivial way that most > editors allow. You can still do this however. > > So basically no, the editor is more of what people term an > "arranger" or "sequencer", but it can still do quite a lot. > > to get back the question: i've used - > > snd - very powerful, a little tricky to learn to use > sweep - excellent traditional editor > gnoise - excellent traditional editor, not moving as > fast as sweep but has a few benefits > > lots and lots of people are using audacity (its one of the > top 10 downloads from sourceforge.net), but i've never > tried it. > > --p -- Dr Nick Bailey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Centre for Music Technology (http://cmt.gla.ac.uk) Department of Electronics and Electrical Engineering (http://www.elec.gla.ac.uk/) The University of Glasgow (http://www.elec.gla.ac.uk) Find my public key at http://www.keyserver.net Fingerprint: 9ED7 6063 C1F7 A0FB 2F7E D2F6 168F A41A 6527 CE44
