Ken Restivo: >>> >>> There are actually very good reasons to use ardour for post-processing of >>> live-recordings: >>> - Its completely non-destructive, even if you slice your 2-hour-file into >>> 10-seconds snippets and rearrange them and delete them one-by-one, you still >>> don't loose the material. Yes, you should have backups, but who knows... >>> - Its _very_ easy to apply mastering effects over the whole session. (And >>> with the jamin-control-plugin you can change settings between songs.) >>> - And all editing on effects and automation is non-destructive too. That is >>> very nice compared to clicking "apply effect (silence)", having the computer >>> work for ten minutes and the realize that a) its the wrong effect and b) >>> the "create undo" wasn't selected. >>> - ardour is definitely not trying to load the whole 2-hour file into ram... >> >> Don't forget the CD markers -> TOC export for creating CDs easily with >> Ardour. Works great for live CDs where you want to add track >> boundaries with no gaps for disk-at-once burning. >> > > That's it. Next time I will use Ardour. > > It would be very nice to split a 90-minute liveset up into multiple, > song-length WAV's, but it was too much hassle to do that in Audacity. I > suspect it'd be very easy to do in Ardour. > It is very easy to do that in Snd. Snd also handles large files appropriately (by reading from harddisk while playing and using cached peak files). Using snd-ls, you can just mark the area you want in a new file, and right click, select copy to new or save selection. _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user