T O P I C ��� R E V I E W
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AndrewR
Member # 44
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posted
Does anyone know where I can download some free software that edits mp3s? I want to edits some files I have...Thanks Andrew ------------------ "I threw bitter tears at the ocean But all that came back was the tide..." Sarah McLachlan 'I Will Not Forget You'
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Fabrux
Member # 71
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posted
If you have Sound recorder, you can edit MP3s. Mind you you have to convert them to WAV first and back to MP3 afterwards... ------------------ "We have HTML and images in sigs disabled here. Don't try it. If you do, I'll shove the image up your ass, then ban you. Have a nice day. :)" -Charles Capps, August 13, 2000
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AndrewR
Member # 44
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posted
How large would a five minute song be in Soundrecorder!?!What program would I need for the conversion back to mp3? Are there anyother easier ways? Andrew ------------------ "I threw bitter tears at the ocean But all that came back was the tide..." 'I Will Not Forget You' Sarah McLachlan
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PsyLiam
Member # 73
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posted
These questions, and more, answered on the next episode of "FlareTalk"!------------------ "Why do you want to spend time with a deer? They're so stupid, they get hypnotized by headlights!" - Guido Anchovy
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Omega
Member # 91
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posted
I'd suggest GoldWave. IIRC, you can edit MP3s to an extreme degree using it.------------------ "The power of accurate observation is commonly called cynicism by those who have not got it." - George Bernard Shaw
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Jeff Raven
Member # 20
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posted
As someone who edits mp3's all the time, I shall impart some information to you.Yes, you have to change an mp3 to wav file before you can edit it. If you use Winamp(www.winamp.com), it comes with a function to change the mp3 into a wav file. You can use sound recorder to edit the wav file(I use cool edit pro). The change the file back to an mp3, you can use Audiograbber from Xing(not sure on the website) or CDCopy (cdcopy.actadivina.com), which also makes mp3s from CD tracks. ------------------ Intelligence, Integrity, Responsibility. Vote Bush/Cheney 2000
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Shik
Member # 343
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posted
And how many of those are free?------------------ "Do you know how much YOU'RE worth??.....2.5 million Woolongs. THAT'S your bounty. I SAID you were small fry..." --Spike Spiegel
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TSN
Member # 31
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posted
Well, Winamp is free, of course. I don't know about the others.I can say from experience that converting full MP3 songs into WAVs and opening them in Sound Recorder can be a problem. My computer crashes whenever I try it... :-) ------------------ "It's like the Star of David or something. But without the whole Judaism thing." -Frank Gerratana, 17-Aug-2000
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Nim
Member # 205
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posted
What I think is fascinating is that if you have a 5:30 minute long mp3, it's correspondingly 5.3 mb too, if the frequenzy is 44KHz and the bitrate is the standard 128 Kb/s. Any higher and the file-size rises. A song that's 1:35 long is 1.45mb big, (I just checked). This means that you can SEE how long it is just by looking at the file-size. I don't think this is a coincedence. Anyone know the history or creation of the mp3?------------------ Ready for the action now, Dangerboy Ready if I'm ready for you, Dangerboy Ready if I want it now, Dangerboy? How dare you, dare you, Dangerboy? How dare you, Dangerboy? I dare you, dare you, Dangerboy... �on Flux, "Thanatophobia"
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Jeff Raven
Member # 20
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posted
Winamp, Audiograbber, CDCopy are all free. The last two however are shareware, and need to be registered sometime.------------------ Intelligence, Integrity, Responsibility. Vote Bush/Cheney 2000
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Fabrux
Member # 71
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posted
Tim: I opened a 50 some odd MB WAV in sound recorder ------------------ "We have HTML and images in sigs disabled here. Don't try it. If you do, I'll shove the image up your ass, then ban you. Have a nice day. :)" -Charles Capps, August 13, 2000
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Dat
Member # 302
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posted
I once opened up a similar sized wave file in Sound Recorder as well, but only after nearly 1 hour. I don't remember exactly how long, but it was long...and during that time, I couldn't do anything on the computer.------------------ Teddy Roosevelt: "Speak softly and carry a big stick." Yosemite Sam: "Well, I speak loudly and I carry a bigger stick...and I use it too!"
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Fabrux
Member # 71
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posted
It took about 5 minutes to load the song up. But that's on a Celeron 500 with 64 MB RAM ------------------ "We have HTML and images in sigs disabled here. Don't try it. If you do, I'll shove the image up your ass, then ban you. Have a nice day. :)" -Charles Capps, August 13, 2000
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TSN
Member # 31
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posted
I forget how big the one was that I tried to open. It came from a 12.5MB MP3. It crashed after a few minutes. But, I think I'd blame that on Win98SE. Like everything else... :-)------------------ "It's like the Star of David or something. But without the whole Judaism thing." -Frank Gerratana, 17-Aug-2000
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Fabrux
Member # 71
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posted
Indeed. This damned OS is annoying, isn't it, Tim? ------------------ "We have HTML and images in sigs disabled here. Don't try it. If you do, I'll shove the image up your ass, then ban you. Have a nice day. :)" -Charles Capps, August 13, 2000
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TSN
Member # 31
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posted
That's why I bought Linux last night. Hopefully, I'll manage to get it installed soon... :-)------------------ "It's like the Star of David or something. But without the whole Judaism thing." -Frank Gerratana, 17-Aug-2000
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SCSImperium
Member # 397
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posted
quote: That's why I bought Linux last night. Hopefully, I'll manage to get it installed soon
You don't know what you've got ahead of you. It took me three weeks to install Mandrake 7.0, including getting the sound to work and to get my various USB things to be detected. Not to mention configuring the kernel to a tee. And I still haven't found a winmodem driver for my Compaq modem, so I can only go online in Windows until I buy a "real" modem ... ------------------ -Small Computer Systems Interface "Scuzzy" Emperor Operator of the Goulag Hotel, maintainer of the workhouses. Operator of Cargill Conglomerate Publications, http://www.cargillconglomerate.com "Woman is deprived of rights from lack of education, and the lack of education results from the absence of rights. We must not forget that the subjection of women is so complete, and dates from such distant ages, that we are often unwilling to recognize the gulf that separates them from us." Tolstoy, on a more objective note.
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TSN
Member # 31
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posted
Well, I got Red Hat. If this is the easy-to-install distribution, I don't want to see the hard ones...Actually, I'm just kidding. So far, the problems I'm having aren't Linux' fault. The problems stem from the fact that I didn't put more than one partition on my hard drive when I set up the computer, the fact that Win98 uses a stupid Microsoft type of partition, rather than normal FAT32, and that fact that I don't have any way to back up right now (I'm going to buy a CD-RW as soon as possible). ------------------ "It's like the Star of David or something. But without the whole Judaism thing." -Frank Gerratana, 17-Aug-2000
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AndrewR
Member # 44
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posted
Can I ask... whats a 'partition' on your hard drive again?Oh and thanks for the mp3 info... I'll go try it out! Thanks Andrew ------------------ "I threw bitter tears at the ocean But all that came back was the tide..." 'I Will Not Forget You' Sarah McLachlan
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Fabrux
Member # 71
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posted
A partition is when you split your hardrive into two (or more) parts, thus giving you more drives. I, for instance, have a C drive, a D drive, and my CD-RW is E drive.------------------ "Weirdness doesn't frighten me. Ten-foot-tall purple wombats with shaving-cream-covered broadswords singing 'Kumbayah'... Now, that scares me..." -Tim Nix
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SCSImperium
Member # 397
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posted
More acurrately, a partition defines the file system(s) on a hard disk and how many sectors a filesystem is allocated. Linux uses the Unix standard, Extended 2. Windows, more conventionally, uses FAT 16 or 32. I also believe MyOS, OS2, and BeOS have there own respective file systems as well. Also, unlike Windows, Linux requires a swap partition seperate from the space applications occupy; so thus, there is no performance loss when your Linux partition is full. Most distributions of Linux on a CD come with a utility to slice you hard drive up into the necessary pieces (i.e. a cut down version of Partition Magic). ------------------ -Small Computer Systems Interface "Scuzzy" Emperor Operator of the Goulag Hotel, maintainer of the workhouses. Operator of Cargill Conglomerate Publications, http://www.cargillconglomerate.com "Woman is deprived of rights from lack of education, and the lack of education results from the absence of rights. We must not forget that the subjection of women is so complete, and dates from such distant ages, that we are often unwilling to recognize the gulf that separates them from us." Tolstoy, on a more objective note.
[This message has been edited by SCSImperium (edited August 21, 2000).]
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PsyLiam
Member # 73
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posted
Isn't that penguin adorable though? Awww.------------------ "Why do you want to spend time with a deer? They're so stupid, they get hypnotized by headlights!" - Guido Anchovy
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TSN
Member # 31
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posted
Scuzzy: Yeah, my problem is that the partition utility w/ Linux couldn't cut parts out of the already-existing Windows partition. I borrowed Partition Magic from a friend, but it was an old version, and it couldn't work w/ FAT32X, which is apparently a spawn of Microsoft designed for Win98. So, I got a CD-RW, and I'm going to back everything up and start over, making multiple partitions to start with...------------------ "It's like the Star of David or something. But without the whole Judaism thing." -Frank Gerratana, 17-Aug-2000
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SCSImperium
Member # 397
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posted
I have a new version of PM that can work with Fat32. I could send you the install program through e-mail/icq.------------------ -Small Computer Systems Interface "Scuzzy" Emperor Operator of the Goulag Hotel, maintainer of the workhouses. Operator of Cargill Conglomerate Publications, http://www.cargillconglomerate.com "Woman is deprived of rights from lack of education, and the lack of education results from the absence of rights. We must not forget that the subjection of women is so complete, and dates from such distant ages, that we are often unwilling to recognize the gulf that separates them from us." Tolstoy, on a more objective note.
[This message has been edited by SCSImperium (edited August 22, 2000).]
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