On Monday 14 August 2006 08:03, Bearcat M. Sandor wrote: > Hello folks, > > I have a number of files that were transcribed from records. One side of > the record equals one wav file. I used to use gramofile to split them up. > Gramofile simply searched for the quiet passages and broke up the tracks, > based on user preferences. > > Gramofile is no-more and my system has advanced to the point where > gramofile is broken and i cannot recompile it. > > Is there another app that does the same thing (or can do it) and is still > active. Command line or gui makes no difference, but i have a preference > for qt/kde, though gtk based is ok. For mastering my old albums to CD I use audacity for the recording & cleanup, then use gcdmaster to create the CDs. It won't auto-split into tracks, but the gui shows a waveform of your wav file - you can then position track markers wherever you like & burn to CD. I always found gramofile seemed to chop tracks a little short with it's autosplitting & I could never tweak it just the way I liked it. This way, if I want individual tracks, I just use the CD: grip -> ogg vorbis (gotta love my iRiver!). I find doing it that way that the tracks don't end so abruptly and fade-outs properly fade out. Now if audacity had this ability to apply track markers & generate a TOC file for cdrdao, I wouldn't need gcdmaster at all ;-) Cheers, - Brendon. -- "Danger, you haven't seen the last of me!" "No, but the first of you turns my stomach!" -- The Firesign Theatre's Nick Danger 08:58:03 up 20 days, 17:49, 9 users, load average: 0.21, 0.24, 0.22