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David W Jackson -
Flameproof, how EXACTLY do you cut up the lesson? I mean, what tools/software do you use to do
that? Thanks.
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flameproof -
Quote:
Flameproof, how EXACTLY do you cut up the lesson? I mean, what tools/software do you use to do
that?
I use Cool Edit, I have that since ages. However, it's not freeware. For FREE I suggest Audacity.
I haven't tried it, so let me know.....
http://audacity.sourceforge.net/
volga_volga -
flameproof, thanks for the link. this looks good. i was looking for such programme for a while
now...
are you a Russian speaker by any chance?
roddy -
Split this from the Chinesepod discussion.
Another vote for audacity - very useful tool and very easy to use. Maybe takes a little time to
figure out what you can do with it, but worth the effort. If you do a search on audacity you'll
find previous comments about it.
onebir -
There's also a portable version of Audacity. No install required, so you can carry it around on a
USB key.
roddy -
Was going to write more about audacity yesterday but didn't have time.
Audacity is useful as it lets you lay out multiple soundtracks on one page, lets you listen to
one, some or all of them at one time, lets you copy and paste bits of sound around the same way
you do with text in Word, and you can save it all as a project file so it's all there when you
come back to it later.
As an example, you could have a recording from your textbook in mp3 format. You open it with
audacity and listen to it a few times. Then you record yourself reading the same line. Then you
mute the textbook version and listen to yourself, try to spot what's wrong then rerecord minus
(hopefully) the mistakes. Then you compare your second version with the model and realize you are
still getting one sound wrong. So you highlight just that bit of audio and listen to it 10 times,
comparing it with your version. You're still not quite sure what's going on, so you slow it down
by 50% and that helps a bit. So you record your third version, and while it isn't perfect you feel
fairly happy with it. Then you're tired so you save it and go to bed. The next morning you open it
up again and review your first, second and third attempts with fresh ears, taking note of the
changes you made for future reference.
flameproof -
I am not sure about Audacity, but CoolEdit has a "de-noise" function. It works really great on old
tapes to get rid of the often strong background hiss noise.
I think Audacity can do that too. It would be great for the FSI fans out there.....
roddy -
Audacity does, never used it though.
Shadowdh -
Many thanks for the links guys,
It will be very useful...
David W Jackson -
Thanks Flameproof. Nice.
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