There's also SMPTE LTC (Longitudinal Time Code) which is aimed at the audio/visual production business.
Right. Most of the studio-oriented pc audio tools I know of that do time coding do SMPTE coding. I use Sony Acid and SoundForge, and they will do SMPTE coding. Note that there are quite a variety of SMPTE flavors depending on the intended end use -- 24 frame [per second] movie synch, 25 frame EBU synch, 29.97 frame drop and non-drop video synch, and 30 frame, which is generally used for multitrack audio synchronization.
Joe didn't say whether he needs the time code to be absolute (i.e., GMT, CST, etc.) or just track-relative. SMPTE code is generally track-relative.
I'm not aware that any of the common studio-type applications support VOX-operated recording, but then I've never really looked.
Best regards, Charles _______________________________________________ time-nuts mailing list -- [email protected] To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts and follow the instructions there.
