Brother_in_Arm85 Posted September 3, 2006 Share Posted September 3, 2006 I found this program called Audacity. It is a program for sound editting that has many excellent features; for example, you can change the tempo, speed, and pitch of the sound. You can copy, cut and paste sound pieces and put them anywhere else, and even change Real Media files to MP3. And the best of all, it's completly free! Don't pay a single penny! I hope it helps, especially for modding the game. Here's the link: http://audacity.sourceforge.net/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WytchDokta Posted September 3, 2006 Share Posted September 3, 2006 this program called Audacity. It is a program for sound editting I would never have guessed that if you hadn't have told me. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
le Tigre Posted September 4, 2006 Share Posted September 4, 2006 I've done a fair bit of work with this program, it is a little buggy, but definatly does the job, and is great for anyone wanting to learn sound design. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
squad_e Posted September 4, 2006 Share Posted September 4, 2006 I've done a fair bit of work with this program, it is a little buggy, but definatly does the job, and is great for anyone wanting to learn sound design. There are better programs... This seems too n00bish .. Try using stuff like ACID pro, you can get a free trial version from google .. WD care to share some info?... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WytchDokta Posted September 4, 2006 Share Posted September 4, 2006 WD care to share some info?... Lemme go get my remixes I made totally in GoldWave to share. That good enough for ya? Mind you, some of them I made just using Acid Pro or Sound Forge. **Loads up techno remix of Jingle Bells in GoldWave** Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
element11 Posted October 2, 2006 Share Posted October 2, 2006 I have used audacity, but i like cubase, logic audio, soundforge and acid pro. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WytchDokta Posted October 2, 2006 Share Posted October 2, 2006 (edited) I have used audacity, but i like cubase, logic audio, soundforge and acid pro. You da man! Cubase/Cubasis and Logic are two of the best. However, the god is Kyma-X (which is only available in the Capybara sound computation system built specifically for sound designers/musicians.) But it's $3470 a go.... Basic Configuration four processors installed on the motherboard Beat that for audio editing! Anybody got a spare $3470 that I could borrow? Please? Edited October 2, 2006 by WytchDokta Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
element11 Posted October 3, 2006 Share Posted October 3, 2006 Damn! Sounds like a great program. It must be really good to require 4 cpus. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WytchDokta Posted October 3, 2006 Share Posted October 3, 2006 (edited) Damn! Sounds like a great program. It must be really good to require 4 cpus. Read all the specs on it man. It can host a further 12 expansion cards, and each of those memory cards has two more processors on too (that's a total of 28 processsors)!! I think their processors built specifically for sound design though, so not processors as in the one in your everyday rig. Best bit about Kyma/Capybara is that it's so easy to carry around. You can also run it through your desktop or laptop too (Capybara is the base system, you'll need a keyboad and monitor for it at least) Imagine the sound designer's dream machine... a machine that would let you graphically string together unlimited-length chains of processing and synthesis modules and run them with zero latency on a dedicated multiprocessor computer with little or no impact on your main computer's memory or processing capabilities... where you could expand the processing capabilities of your hardware transparently, simply by plugging in more processing cards, because the machine was designed from the outset with scalability and multiple processors in mind... where you'd never have to sacrifice sound quality just because you're trying to squeeze more real time processing out of your desktop or laptop computer... with FireWire, timecode, MIDI, and 8 channels of 24-bit 100 kHz audio... controlled by the award-winning Kyma software with cutting-edge algorithms like granular processing, real-time analysis/resynthesis, aggregate synthesis, and spectral morphing... an online community of colleagues at the leading edge of film, music, advertising, and game development... a tech support staff that is among the most dedicated and educated in the business, and a symbolic, blue LED on the front panel.Hardware Specifications Basic Configuration four processors installed on the motherboard 96 MB sample RAM 12 expansion slots I/O and external sync (see below) External desktop or rackmount case (protects the DSPs and converters from the electrically noisy environment inside your personal computer, and leaves valuable slot-space free to use for other cards on your host computer) Expansion Card two processors installed on the expansion card 48 MB sample RAM (per card) Up to 12 expansion cards (for a total of 28 processors) can be added Inputs and Outputs 4-8 channels 32-100 kHz sample rate 24-bit Balanced Analog and Digital (AES/EBU) External Synchronization Word Clock input VITC & LTC Timecode input and output Interface options FireWire for Macintosh OS X and OS 9, Windows XP, 2000, and ME desktop and laptop machines Now, if that ain't bad-ass, I ain't playing! Some-one lend me $3470 please!! Edited October 3, 2006 by WytchDokta Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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