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Gear / Technical Help => Post-Processing, Computer / Streaming / Internet Devices & Related Activity => Topic started by: Nick Graham on June 11, 2006, 03:28:05 AM

Title: Mac Software Questions...
Post by: Nick Graham on June 11, 2006, 03:28:05 AM
Now that I've decided to use my new MacBook as my fulltime DAW, I'm trying to figure out what programs are best suited for what we do. Are there any Mac based programs similar to these Windows Apps?:

CD Wav
SHN Tool/Trader's Little Helper
UTorrent*

I've got a copies of Toast and Spark, downloaded Scott's xACT, and already had Audacity, are there any obvious ones I need?

*I downloaded Tomato Torrent, but can't stand the interface...anything (besides Azareus which I hate) you guys would recommend?
Title: Re: Mac Software Questions...
Post by: Nick Graham on June 11, 2006, 03:33:27 AM
As a quick followup...I've ran into a couple of problems.

No matter what files I load into Spark, they're listed as 16/44.1. Anyway to change that? I tried a known 24/96 file, attempted to dither/resample, but was given an error as the original and destination have supposedly the same properties.

Also, I've unsuccessfully tried to install Scott Brown's DVD-Audiofile several times now, and keep getting an error message, any other Mac DVD-A programs?
Title: Re: Mac Software Questions...
Post by: Patrick on June 11, 2006, 03:37:03 AM
Now that I've decided to use my new MacBook as my fulltime DAW, I'm trying to figure out what programs are best suited for what we do. Are there any Mac based programs similar to these Windows Apps?:

CD Wav
SHN Tool/Trader's Little Helper
UTorrent*

I've got a copies of Toast and Spark, downloaded Scott's xACT, and already had Audacity, are there any obvious ones I need?

*I downloaded Tomato Torrent, but can't stand the interface...anything (besides Azareus which I hate) you guys would recommend?

I'd recommend reading through all of the Team Mac Geeks team threads, there is alot of good information in there and IMO is particularly useful especially since you're just starting out on a mac.

Basically, there is NO mac equivalent for CD Wav.  That is one program I miss!  I personally track in Audacity (I've gotten used to the clunkiness  ;D).  Scott's xACT is a great program that I use just about every day.

I only use tomato torrent to make torrents, I also got fed up with the interface.  To download and seed torrents, I use this (http://bitconjurer.org/BitTorrent/). 

For an FTP client (for uploading to the LMA) you can use either Fetch, Transmit, One-Button FTP, Cyberduck, or any of the other free/shareware clients that are available around the interweb.

Good luck, Nick.  I'm sure you're going to love making the switch.


Title: Re: Mac Software Questions...
Post by: greenone on June 12, 2006, 12:47:15 AM
Basically, there is NO mac equivalent for CD Wav.  That is one program I miss!  I personally track in Audacity (I've gotten used to the clunkiness  ;D).  Scott's xACT is a great program that I use just about every day.

These two are great...xACT has a fix-SBE feature that will also let you encode to FLAC on the fly, so it's the same number of steps as track in CD-Wave and encode with FrontEnd. Split wherever you want in the editor of your choice, then use xACT to fix and encode in one step.

If you don't like the official BT client, try Transmission: http://transmission.m0k.org/
Title: Re: Mac Software Questions...
Post by: wbrisette on June 13, 2006, 09:49:58 AM
No matter what files I load into Spark, they're listed as 16/44.1. Anyway to change that? I tried a known 24/96 file, attempted to dither/resample, but was given an error as the original and destination have supposedly the same properties.

Also, I've unsuccessfully tried to install Scott Brown's DVD-Audiofile several times now, and keep getting an error message, any other Mac DVD-A programs?

The sample/bit rate can be caused by the hardware. You can't have a 24/96 file if the hardware doesn't support it (well you can, but you can't play it without the software changing it, sometimes this is done "automagically" by the application). Check your sound options on the computer itself. Not sure on the MacBooks what they support.

DVD-A applications consist of either the front end Scott put on the DVD-A tools, or buying DiscWelder. I have both and have found that the application Scott put together takes about the 1/4th the time to burn a DVD-A disc as DiscWelder does. It also creates a disc image, so you can save the file. Not so with DiscWelder (that's their next step up in the product line and not made for the Mac).

Anyhow, hope you're enjoying the Mac, I think once you get use to a few things, you'll ever wonder what took you so long in joining the Mac community.

Wayne
Title: Re: Mac Software Questions...
Post by: scb on June 13, 2006, 09:58:53 AM
Also, I've unsuccessfully tried to install Scott Brown's DVD-Audiofile several times now, and keep getting an error message, any other Mac DVD-A programs?


http://crush.epix.net/~scb/dvd-audiofile/DVD-Audiofile0.74.mac.zip

maybe you were trying v.73?  .74 is the version for the intel macs


Title: Re: Mac Software Questions...
Post by: scb on June 13, 2006, 10:02:23 AM
No matter what files I load into Spark, they're listed as 16/44.1. Anyway to change that? I tried a known 24/96 file, attempted to dither/resample, but was given an error as the original and destination have supposedly the same properties.

1. when you opened the 24/96 file, it said 16/44.1?
2. how did you try to dither and resample?

i haven't looked at spark prefs in a while, but is there a setting to open files at original rate or treat as a specific one? (does that question even make sense?)?

and Wayne, spark can playback 24/96 files on hardware that doesn't support 96khz.  it just does a quick and dirty software resample on playback.  i've been tracking 24/96 for a few years on apple laptops and none had 96khz support
Title: Re: Mac Software Questions...
Post by: wbrisette on June 13, 2006, 11:52:57 AM
and Wayne, spark can playback 24/96 files on hardware that doesn't support 96khz.  it just does a quick and dirty software resample on playback.  i've been tracking 24/96 for a few years on apple laptops and none had 96khz support

OK, but technically it's still not playing them back, it is doing a resample. ;-)

But, you're also correct, I had no idea Spark did this. (I'll go crawl back into my hole now). ;-)

Wayne