![]() ![]() There's also links to 'screencast' tutorials on Audacity Audacity on the (e-learning Nottingham) site. There are some tips and tricks below which you might find useful. You should also add at least minimal metadata (see below) when prompted. A time-limited trial is available for download, and the full package costs $60 or so.Īs an hour-long lecture could result in a MP3 file of some 40Mb, your students will thank you for editing it into smaller chunks, if you can. Soundforge, the 'professionals choice'. ![]() It's shareware which will only allow up to 150 commands each session after which it packs up and you have to quit and restart, but this is usually enough for simple editing tasks. Goldwave, which is a little idiosyncratic in its interface but easy to use once you get used to it.WavePad, a 'bare-bones' editor for Windows, which is also free (though not Open Source) - this has fewer features than Audacity, but is arguably easier to use, and can export MP3 directly without the need for external plugins.NB: Audacity, for patent reasons, can't directly export MP3 files - you have to download a separate MP3 encoder file known as LAME and place that on your machine - see the Audacity FAQ for details and links to the LAME downloads for Windows and Mac. Audacity is available for PC, Mac and Linux. For editing your podcasts (or any audio clips) a very good, and recommended tool is the free, Open Source, and highly-featured Audacity, which you can download from the Audacity website. ![]()
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