Difference between revisions of "Audacity"

From TheAlmightyGuru
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 3: Line 3:
 
'''''Audacity''''' is a free open source audio editing studio with a no-nonsense interface for [[Linux]], [[Macintosh]], and [[Windows]]. It supports mono and stereo tracks for all the basic audio formats and features plug-in support for the more exotic ones. It has a lot of useful features and audio effects from the basic (echo, reverb, fade out, volume adjustments, noise reduction, etc.) to the more complex (tempo change while retaining timbre, vocal elimination, etc.). It can also play both digital audio and MIDI tracks simultaneously.
 
'''''Audacity''''' is a free open source audio editing studio with a no-nonsense interface for [[Linux]], [[Macintosh]], and [[Windows]]. It supports mono and stereo tracks for all the basic audio formats and features plug-in support for the more exotic ones. It has a lot of useful features and audio effects from the basic (echo, reverb, fade out, volume adjustments, noise reduction, etc.) to the more complex (tempo change while retaining timbre, vocal elimination, etc.). It can also play both digital audio and MIDI tracks simultaneously.
  
I found Audacity in the early 2000s while searching for a replacement for [[GoldWave]], a similar audio studio which sells for $45, and found that nearly all of the features in GoldWave had been duplicated in the free Audacity. I have since stopped using GoldWave in favor of Audacity.
+
I found Audacity in the mid-2000s while searching for a replacement for [[GoldWave]], a similar audio studio which sells for $45, and found that nearly all of the features in GoldWave had been duplicated in the free Audacity. I have since stopped using GoldWave altogether and favor Audacity.
  
 
==Links==
 
==Links==

Revision as of 14:24, 24 April 2018

Audacity v2.2.2.

Audacity is a free open source audio editing studio with a no-nonsense interface for Linux, Macintosh, and Windows. It supports mono and stereo tracks for all the basic audio formats and features plug-in support for the more exotic ones. It has a lot of useful features and audio effects from the basic (echo, reverb, fade out, volume adjustments, noise reduction, etc.) to the more complex (tempo change while retaining timbre, vocal elimination, etc.). It can also play both digital audio and MIDI tracks simultaneously.

I found Audacity in the mid-2000s while searching for a replacement for GoldWave, a similar audio studio which sells for $45, and found that nearly all of the features in GoldWave had been duplicated in the free Audacity. I have since stopped using GoldWave altogether and favor Audacity.

Links