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As far as I know from using protools and audacity the answer is no. You can import each individual aif file into protools but the plug in effects will not be included from protools to audacity when you import to audacity.
yes
As far as I know from using protools and audacity the answer is no. You can import each individual aif file into protools but the plug in effects will not be included from protools to audacity when you import to audacity.
all you do is , extract the killer ringer .dll or ddl to the audacity file then plugins and close . open up audacity and go to edit then preferences and click effects and check rescan vst files when i restart audacity . then restart audacity.
You can do that in Audacity
MP3 files opened with Audacity will be converted to a non-compressed Wave files format for editing. To save the file back as an MP3, you will need to install a 3rd party MP3 codec such as the LAME MP3 encoder.
Audacity breaks long tracks into small pieces so it can edit them more efficiently. When you save an .aup project file, Audacity stores all the pieces in a _data folder that has the same name as the .aup file. For example, "song.aup" will open the pieces inside the "song_data" folder.Note you should not touch the .au files yourself, or move or rename the _data folder. Simply open the .aup file, then Audacity will load the .au files in the correct sequence automatically.
You need to convert the files to .flv or .swf files before inserting them. In audacity, if you just save a file, it saves as a .aup file. You can open these files only with Audacity. You can, however, export the file as a different format by going to the File menu and clicking Export. Next, you will have to find either an online conversion website or download a software, such as RealPlayer converter, and convert the file to a .flv or .swf file.
There is no online site that edits MP3 files, but you can download Audacity and edit MP3 files for free.
It can record and edit the phoneme WAV files, but you're going to have to do the rest yourself.
No, these are all the files you change while editing the song. Audacity compiles them into a folder only it can read. If you want to make the song play in Media Player, go under the main file and choose Export to WAV (or MPEG of you installed LAME).
Audacity is currently available for Windows, Apple OSX and Linux, and saves files in its own AUP Audacity Project file format. Audacity's native file format is NOT Wave (WAV) or MP3. You need to choose Export as Wave or MP3 in order to create a file that can be played back in other programs or transferred to an iPod.