Sound Forge 5 users
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Remco Halderhooter
- Posts: 79
- Joined: Tue Oct 21, 2003 6:42 am
- Contact:
Sound Forge 5 users
I recently had to reinstall XP on my machine. My cd was the first version of 5 which had a few bugs, so I went to to the Sony site to download the most up to date version of SF 5 and couldn't find it. All the other versions were there, but no 5. I emailed support and they said that they could no longer offer it for 'technical reasons'. So they gave me a free serial number for SF 7 and said I should download that instead.
Well worth doing if only for way faster cutting/pasting in big files. Maybe Sony aren't evil after all...
cheers RH
Well worth doing if only for way faster cutting/pasting in big files. Maybe Sony aren't evil after all...
cheers RH
Hey, hey, it's just my opinion.
I stopped using SF because you can't simply slap VST/DX plugins and play with them in real time as you do in Wavelab. Besides, it comes with CD and DVD burner built-in and does everything I need, so it works for me. If you like that piece of cra, I mean, Soundforge, I can't really do anything about it, can I?
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djadonis206
- Posts: 6490
- Joined: Thu Jun 17, 2004 4:23 pm
- Location: Seattle, WA.
OK help me out here - what does a audio editor do that Pro-Tools doesn't?
I had a dream about Sound Forge last night (Honestly) and this latino gang member was getting basslines from samples via SF, when I asked him to show me his technique he told me download the program and then the dream gets kind of funny
I opened a session of SF and it was installed for life on my computer
but anywayz - what's the benefit of a audio editor - I had SF years ago but that was when I had a MPC
thanks
a
I had a dream about Sound Forge last night (Honestly) and this latino gang member was getting basslines from samples via SF, when I asked him to show me his technique he told me download the program and then the dream gets kind of funny
I opened a session of SF and it was installed for life on my computer
but anywayz - what's the benefit of a audio editor - I had SF years ago but that was when I had a MPC
thanks
a
Dude, maybe it´s the beer doing it for me, but that shit made me laugh my brains out.djadonis206 wrote: I had a dream about Sound Forge last night (Honestly) and this latino gang member was getting basslines from samples via SF, when I asked him to show me his technique he told me download the program and then the dream gets kind of funny
a
I find it a useful addition to have a wave editor (Audition) alongside Live. I use it for noise reduction (getting rid of hiss, clicks and pops, etc), and it's sometimes useful to just add effects destructively (Audition hosts VST and DX but also comes with some fantastic internal effects of its own) so that I can simply run audio clips in Live. Also I use it for CD burning, converting files to MP3 format for uploading/sharing online, and sometimes use its' multitrack facilities for mixing together larger files.djadonis206 wrote: what's the benefit of a audio editor
Having said all of that... I recently got myself a copy of Sonar 5 PE, which does pretty much all the stuff I do in Audition except the noise reduction and CD burning. I can't really see that there is much point in having a wave editor when you host can do all the stuff that Sonar does.
I prefer Live 5 as a host - my favourite for sure! So Audition stays for now. But maybe as Live continues to develop there will come a time - as with Sonar - when having a seperate wave editor will no longer be necessary!
iMac Retina 4K 3.3Ghz i7, 16Gb RAM
Live Suite 9.7.1 + Reason 9.1 + Pianoteq 5 + Sibelius 8.5
Listen on Soundcloud
Live Suite 9.7.1 + Reason 9.1 + Pianoteq 5 + Sibelius 8.5
Listen on Soundcloud
