> Yes, and do you see what you are cutting with wav2cdr? With snd you

You said "2 minutes", which implied you already knew how much to cut. ;)

> mouse. With wav2cdr you would probably have to play it with wavplay or
> something alike, time it, and then transfer the times for the
> treatment with wav2cdr

That's the idea. Good for low spec machines. You also only need to cut
out the area where you expect the cut point to be, and display and play
that. 3 years ago there was a very serious shortage of programs which
could the most basic things, I used soundstudio to handle the cut
points nicely. Snd at the time was pretty useless on Linux (no motif
available, and motif is not for low-spec machines).

wav2cdr is also good for things you need to repeatably do on N number
of files. Batch processing, esp on low-spec machines again. I
repeatably adjust beginnings and endings of tracks for a whole CD at
once. It's one piece in the scripting tool box. I do agree though that
its use is limited.

And please don't tell me snd is scriptable. I don't feel like studying
some '60s computer science to make it work.

-- 
Volker Kuhlmann                 is possibly list0570 with the domain in header
http://volker.orcon.net.nz/             Please do not CC list postings to me.

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