[RWP] Wavosaur editor, accessible at the number pad

Rusty Perez rustys.lists at gmail.com
Thu Sep 4 15:29:18 EDT 2014


Does this program do any edit functions which are not possible in reaper?
Sory if this is a silly question. I've just started with reaper.

Thanks!
Rusty


On 7/16/14, Indigo <33indigo at charter.net> wrote:
> Well, it has its midi configuration dialog, and it hosts VST plugIns, so
> I assume you can play midi plugs on it.
> So far, i've opened an MP3 and a .wav file in it, played them by
> pressing the spaceBar, all totally standard, and used its simple pitch
> shift function, whitch offers a field with the number 12; meaning shift
> up by 12 half-steps, and works as expected.
> Next time I look at it I'll put a minus sign in front of the 12 and
> learn if that causes it to shift the track's pitch down 1 octave.
> There's also a high-precision pitch shift function.
> I need to configure its midi to use my eMu PCIE soundcard and its Asio
> driver, which is already seen by Wavosaur.
> Without configuration;  it's using my USB soundcard that speech comes
> through, not a bad card itself, capable of 24 bit 96K playing and
> recording, but that $22 card only has unbalanced 3.5mm jacks. so I only
> use it for speech and audio from Winamp and YouTubes.
> Maybe today I'll get round to configuring a midi keyboard to go into
> Wavosaur, then try to insert a VST plug; and learn how that goes.
> So far, everything I've tried in its menus works as expected, and all
> dialogs speak and respond to clicks from the enter key.
> Once you're in a dialog, you can tab and arrow as usual.
> In the WorkSpace, I get almost nothing from its screen spoken from the
> tab and arrows, but I can read the screen from NVDA's screen review at
> the numPad.
> Try it yourself, no installation, runs wherever you place it, it's free.
> Indi
>
> On 7/15/2014 11:26 AM, Brandon Keith Biggs wrote:
>> Hello,
>> Does it do anything Audacity doesn't do?
>> Can you play Midi on it?
>> thanks,
>>
>> Brandon Keith Biggs
>>
>> On 7/15/2014 6:58 AM, Indigo wrote:
>>> Wavosaur is a free editor that does a bunch of stuff, almost as much
>>> as Sound Forge, plus it records, uses Asio, does zero crossing point
>>> on loops, copies, pastes, trims, sets markers, does batch conversion,
>>> and instantly recognized my soundcards and all their ports, quite
>>> impressive for a free editor.
>>> Its menus are very standard, and all the functions I tried worked
>>> instantly from the enter key.
>>> You don't even need to install Wavosaur, just unzip it and click on
>>> the .EXE file and it runs.
>>> The website shows it for XP and Vista, but I just looked at it in
>>> Windows 7 64 and it looks to be quite useable.
>>> I have Sound Forge in various versions, but Wavosaur could still come
>>> in handy.
>>> True, you don't get much from the arrows and tab key, but everything
>>> is there at the number pad with NVDA's screen review.
>>> For anyone who doesn't have Sound Forge, or any other editor, Wavosaur
>>> does a whole lot more than something like GoldWave, and it's free, no
>>> limitations on number of actions per session, no nags.
>>> Here's the link to download the latest 32 and 64 bit versions:
>>>
>>> http://www.wavosaur.com
>>>
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>>
>>
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