I don’t do it with automatic tools. In the instance of TV shows, the commercial breaks or scene changes likely would cause a split. It is possible to move through a file by time. It is necessary to use your JAWS cursor to reach this function. As TV shows are in 30 or 60 minute parts, consider advancing in these increments. After each show is saved, the ends can be cleaned up and commercials extracted.
A lot of production work goes into making an audio or video clip listenable or watchable. When I developed this skill, I was surprised how much a basic recording needs to be produced. I was trained as a writer, and very little time is spent formatting a prepared document compared to the time needed to research, organize, and articulate the information in the document. In the audio world, crafting a high quality production is critical to the content presentation. Kelly On 7/17/10, Joanne <countrymom...@embarqmail.com> wrote: > I am trying to split a huge file with several TV episodes on it. I'm > obviously not figuring out the pause detection thing right, because no > matter how I adjust the numbers in the list of options I may get anywhere > from 2 to 15 pauses. Is there a better program that can detect a longer > pause, such as when a show ends, and just cut the episodes into parts? Or > does MP# Direct Cut have a feature I'm unaware of? How do all of you split > large files and make them start and end episodes so well? Thanks. Kind of > frustrated. > To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to: > pc-audio-unsubscr...@pc-audio.org > To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to: pc-audio-unsubscr...@pc-audio.org