Hi,
I use both gold wave and sound forge and absolutely they
do. With sound forge, its very very easy. Press the up or down
arrows to change the zoom, and right and left arrows to position
yourself exactly where you want to be. You can mark a bit you'd like
to cut out and preview what it would sound like if you pressed
delete, before you actually ax anything, and if you make a mistake,
there is always the undo feature! Sound forge is, in my world, the
best there is out there for simple and complex editing!
Hth,
Rusty
> At 07:44 PM 2/26/2007, Tony Swartz spake thusly:-
>First, let me ask that you forgive my ignorance for using the
>incorrect editing terms. I've used Total Recorder for several years,
>mostly for very coarse editing. The other day I was attempting to
>clean up an interview trying to get rid of pauses and the all too
>many stumbles and realized that with Total recorder, it's only
>possible to move the editing markers by a tenth of a second
>gradations. So, as a result if I didn't by happen stance place a
>marker exactly between words, moving it to the left or right by a
>tenth of a second would make it too large of a leap. The result
>would be either to include the end of the last word of the phrase I
>whished to cut, or clip the first word of the portion I want to
>retain. My question is whether either Gold Wave or Sound Forge
>allows for much finer movements of editing markers?
>
>Any comments would be appreciated.
>
>Tony Swartz
>
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