Anyone else encountering the Comcast DNS issue tonight? If you're in the same boat, you can manually point to different Comcast DNS servers (68.47.160.6 and 68.47.160.5 are ones I got from another board) and it should work. I've been having connection issues all day and thought it was my adapter and/or router.
'War Stories'
Buffistechnology 2: You Made Her So She Growls?
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My comcast was dead last night. I wonder if my problem was bad Comcast DNS servers too....
Is it possible to connect to b.org using an IP address, for those rare occasions when someone might lack a working DNS server?
Erin, I suggest that you download and install openoffice. [link]
It's an excellent free program that's fullly compatible with MS Office and will keep your bullet as they are.
I love Wordperfect, but only when I originate documents in it. Converting from Word into Wordperfect is a nightmare.
Anyone else encountering the Comcast DNS issue tonight? If you're in the same boat, you can manually point to different Comcast DNS servers (68.47.160.6 and 68.47.160.5 are ones I got from another board) and it should work. I've been having connection issues all day and thought it was my adapter and/or router.
huh. i was wondering what was going on. felt like i had dial-up again last night. everything was painfully slow.
I've got a long mp3 file that I want to edit. I need to chop off a couple minutes from the beginning and the end. I have several high end audio editors, but I'm pretty sure they would effectively convert the mp3 to a wav file when I opened it, and then convert it back to mp3 after I edited and resaved it. I'd rather avoid reconverting it since you lose some fidelity that way.
Is it possible to edit an mp3 file without converting it back and forth? Anyone know of any editors that do that?
Goldwave will do it.
Jon, I've done that kind of editing in CoolEdit 2000, but I have no idea if an internal conversion to .wav occurs or not. The thought never occurred to me until just now.
dcp -- how do you know it's not doing the conversion?
Ack. You're right. Searching around the help file, I found this:
Note that to open MPEG Layer 3 files (.mp3) you must have the new Windows Media Player installed.
Audacity will do it.