Couldn't have said it better myself. I remember once upon not all that a long ago <smile> when the only way I could edit with a Mac was to navigate by time through my audio file I wished to edit, took me a while to get used to and I wouldn't recommend this method to anyone if they can avoid it but like everything else, once i got the hang of it my speed increased and actually, editing to the milisecond had one advantage in that you got extremely accurate and professional sounding edits. thankfully those days are behind us now but it just goes to show what you can do if you're really determiend to use something to get a job done.
On 05/03/2008, at 9:13 PM, Doc wrote: > What makes an editor professional is determined by the skill of the > person > doing the editing. If you haven't a clue on what to listen for, > remove or > enhance, I don't care how many bells and whistles a particular editing > program may have you're going to get poor to mediocre quality. You > are > going to have to scrape your ears a while to get what you have > decided is > good to excellant quality. ****************************** Dane Trethowan From Melton Victoria Australia Phone +613 9747 3975 Voiceover Tech Support +613 8732 9237 Fax +613 9743 7954 mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] msn: [EMAIL PROTECTED] skype: callto:grtdane12 ******************************* Audio List Help, Guidelines, Archives and more... http://www.pc-audio.org To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]