Cada día ofrecemos un programa licenciado GRATIS que de otra manera tendrías que comprar!
WaveCut Audio Editor 5.6.2.0 estaba como Giveaway el día n 13 de octubre de 2019
WaveCut es un ligero visual editor de audio. Está diseñado para trabajar de forma simultánea con varios archivos y proporciona una instantánea de intercambio de datos entre windows en modo virtual.
Modalidad Virtual permite procesar archivos de tamaño ilimitado. El editor es compatible con la mayoría de los modernos formatos de audio, la interfaz gráfica proporciona la escala automática en pantallas de alta resolución.
Windows 7/ 8/ 10
7.33 MB
$14.95
i-Sound Recorder es una solución universal para la grabación de sonido desde cualquier fuente. Es compatible con la mayoría de los modernos formatos de sonido, incluyendo Hi-Res Audio. Además el programador de grabación, detector de silencio, tag editor y administrador de grabaciones, el programa es compatible con complementos externos tales como un sistema de reconocimiento de música.
AudioRetoucher es un programa para cambiar el tempo y el tono de un archivo de audio en tiempo real. Esto hace más fácil para un cantante o instrumentista para trabajar con difícil claves y ayuda a los DJs crear la mezcla perfecta. Después de la sintonización fina, puede guardar el archivo de audio con la nueva configuración.
tuneXplorer es un programa diseñado para calcular rápidamente la clave y el tempo de las pistas de tu colección de música. El resultado de la obra puede ser guardado en etiquetas de audio o exportar como un archivo de texto.
Comentarios en WaveCut Audio Editor 5.6.2.0
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I’m fluent in Audacity. But, most of what I do is a simple trim, cut and/or fade. So I installed WaveCut to test whether it would simplify work for me. It does, but . . .
My biggest issue is that I’m given no choice as to where the file is saved. It overwrites the original. A second negative for me is that positioning the cursor isn’t as simple as click/drag.
In both cases the workaround for me is simple; except I have to think. Making a copy of the file (right-click > copy) and using that copy for the edit lets me play all I want at no risk. As for the cursor, I can click it to about where I want it and then drag both the right and left highlights to a precise location. The enlarge lens makes this easy.
I tested with mp3, wav, aif, wma and ogg files. Drag and drop was quick. (Not so quick into Audacity) Save was quick even though I had no control. Export (save) in Audacity is much slower and requires more clicks of the mouse.
I liked the simple three choices of how a fade works in WaveCut. I did not test, but WaveCut offers a lot of choices of how a cut is made and what can be done with the cut material. The help file is simple – more of a quick start. Then again, the program is simple and that is its strength.
Time will tell whether I keep WaveCut for simple edits or go back to Audacity for everything. If I wasn’t so invested in Audacity this would be a no-brainer. It’s a good program for occasional users and lets you really clean up those live performance files.
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Lighter, you can use Save As... to select another file name/location.
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Not really a giveaway at all. The program to be of any use at all requires you to download audio converter.exe from the developer's website. This particular component is NOT free, so it's in effect it's like giving away a free car with no engine, but then expecting you to 'buy' the engine. Uninstalled!!!
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Abyssmedia,
I downloaded and tried this out after commenting and owe you an apology. I opened an MP3 file, trimmed some chatter before and after a music selection, then faded out the end during the applause. I have not been able to listen on good speakers to compare quality but at a quick listen seems fine.
I had no problems saving as an MP3 and was also able to save it as a WAV file. That is all the testing I have done so far but it does, indeed, do what is claimed. I don't know what task John H was trying to accomplish but for what is claimed, it does indeed work fine. Thank you.
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Did some light testing (trim before and after, fade out) and it seems to work fine.
I usually install as a regular user and provide admin credentials when the install program requests it. This resulted in:
* Desktop shortcut was not created for regular user; only for the admin account
* Program was registered only for the admin account, not for regular user. When I restarted the program as a regular user, it was a trial version but after re-registering again, is successfully registered.
I'd suggest tweaking the install to ask if the installer wants to add the program for all users.
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