Grammostola Rosea wrote: > frank pirrone wrote: > >> Olivier Guilyardi wrote: >> >> >>> garry.ogle@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: >>> >>> >>> >>>> frank pirrone wrote: >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>>> I'd also look into >>>>> Gramofile: >>>>> for pop/click filtering and automatic breaking of a continuous recording >>>>> into "tracks" or songs. It can be used for post-processing the >>>>> recordings you make. >>>>> I'd also look into >>>>> Gramofile: >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>> I'd recommend gnome-wave-cleaner for post-processing: >>>> >>>> http://gwc.sourceforge.net/ >>>> >>>> >>>> >>> +1 for Gnome Wave Cleaner. I successfully digitalized 50+ years old persian >>> music LP's using this app. >>> >>> -- >>> Olivier >>> _______________________________________________ >>> >>> >>> >> Yeah, me too. It's a fine program, but my reason for referring the OP >> to Gramofile was primarily its functionality for breaking a continuous >> recording into individual tracks or songs based upon the silence between >> as delimiter. >> >> Anyone have another program recommendation for that operation? >> >> Of course it's easy enough to manually split a waveform where one tune >> ends and another begins, but if one were digitizing an entire record >> collection that would be beyond onerous. Also DAO can certainly handle >> impressing that continuous recording onto optical media, but that's not >> the same as having individual files - for any of a number of purposes. >> >> >> >> > Thanks all. Interesting suggesting Frank... > > Btw. Does it matter for quality what soundcard is used? > > Not in my experience. It's not a demanding audio task. Others may report differently. I digitized some vinyl, but did more audio cassette processing, and that worked very well. Frank _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user