Sun, 19 August 2007 Show Notes
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Mon, 5 March 2007 Well, I finally got around to editing #69. Shownotes:
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Sat, 30 December 2006 Shownotes:
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Sun, 24 December 2006 Finally, after two failed attempts, and a week off, (Really long story) We're back with a vengeance, for HPM #66 Shownotes
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Thu, 30 November 2006 Shownotes
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Sat, 25 November 2006 Show Notes:
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Sun, 19 November 2006 Shownotes:
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Fri, 10 November 2006 Shownotes
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Fri, 3 November 2006 .wav and .aiff files are a wonderful thing, when they work. Most of the time they do. But if your computer or recording program crashes before you stop recording it can be a real pain to recover them, but it can be done. Here's the scenario: I was recording the podcast, and while protools was recording, it crashed. First off, I had to grab the files out of the session name/Audio Files/ folder, and stash them away elsewhere on the hard drive to prevent protools from overwriting them when I started recording again. Next, I got a program called AIFF From PCM Point is, a WAV ir AIFF file is simply PCM audio encoding with a bit of meta data in either end. Without the metadata, Quicktime, Audacity, Protools, and any other app i tried refused to open the file. AIFF from PCM has one major flaw, If the file in question is not perfectly divisible by (Bytes Per sample * tracks) in my case 3, (24-bit mono files...) If refuses to operate on the file in question. Having encountered this situation, and bailing myself out with a demo version of Sony's Sound Forge, I knew I would have to throw out the first bit of the file to get the rest of the data to line up. Incedentally, I also had to remove one bit from the end to get the file to convert, (YMMV, depending on app, and record settings.) So in comes 0xED, a tool you can get free from Apple. With 0xED I was able to delete the first and last bytes from my damaged audio files, convert them to AIFF, and bring them back into Protools. If you have a little time and inclination you can do this yourself without having to buy or pirate any software. Category: general -- posted at: 6:11 PM Comments[0] |
Sun, 29 October 2006 Shownotes:
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