Hello Danny, 

In order to receive the scripts for Sound Forge, send an email to Jim 
Snowberger at: 

[email protected]. He charges $30, and he's a great guy. Hope this 
helps. 

Tina    

-----Original Message-----
From: Pc-audio [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Danny Miles
Sent: Tuesday, March 10, 2015 12:15 PM
To: PC Audio Discussion List
Subject: Re: Editing Mouth Noise and Braille Display Clicks

Hi Jamie.  Thanks for your message.

I'm using a Shure SM58, which I understand to be one of the most commonly-used 
all-purpose vocal mics.  I plug my mic into a mixer rather than using a USB mic 
... do you have any better suggestions?  I do use a pop shield, so I don't have 
issues with plosives, but the Braille display and mouth noises seem more 
evident than I expected.

Also, I wasn't aware that there were Jaws scripts for Sound Forge.  I used SF 
before I started with GoldWave many years ago and, generally, I think GoldWave 
works just as well.  However, if you can please advise on how to obtain the 
scripts for SF it might be worth contemplating.

Many thanks, Danny



On 3/10/15, Jamie Kelly <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> You could try Sound Forge and with the Jaws scripts you can use the 
> EQ, shift and pitch sliders Etc.
>
> If you have some vision, Adobe Audition is very good also if it's 
> still available. Both these programs cost around $300 to $400 each.
>
> Also look at the type of mike your using.
>
> Jamie
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Pc-audio [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
> Danny Miles
> Sent: Tuesday, 10 March 2015 9:09 PM
> To: PC Audio Discussion List
> Subject: Editing Mouth Noise and Braille Display Clicks
>
> Hello everyone.  I wonder if anybody can please advise.
>
> I currently record using a broadcasting encoder and edit my content 
> using GoldWave.  However, I'm having significant issues with the 
> presence of mouth clicks and the constant sounds of my Braille display 
> as I move from line to line (or as the cursor flashes).
>
> I find that GoldWave's editing options are generally too weak to have 
> any impact or too aggressive to leave a high-quality recording.  I 
> currently have Depopper; could this be used to remove the issues 
> described above (and also the hiss of room ambience)?  If so, any 
> advice on particular settings would be appreciated.  If not, can 
> anybody please make any other suggestions?
>
> Many thanks, Danny
>
>
>
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