I'm eleven hundred and twenty years old! Just gimme a friggin' beer!

Anya ,'Storyteller'


Buffistechnology 2: You Made Her So She Growls?  

Got a question about technology? Ask it here. Discussion of hardware, software, TiVos, multi-region DVDs, Windows, Macs, LINUX, hand-helds, iPods, anything tech related. Better than any helpdesk!


Gris - Apr 08, 2005 7:21:24 pm PDT #2358 of 10003
Hey. New board.

Well, Jon, if all I wanted to do was cut stuff off the beginning and end, I wouldn't use a normal audio editing tool at all. Because of the way MP3 works, I'm fairly sure, doing things like cutting things out of the middle, adding effects, and whatnot is pretty difficult without a conversion, so any editing program that allows such things will probably internally convert (though I could be wrong about this). For cutting off blocks and the front and back of a file, I would use the command-line ffmpeg tool (available for linux and mac, and maybe windows as well). Say I have a file, song.mp3, that is 6 minutes long, and I want to cut off a minute each from the beginning and end (for a total of a 4 minute track), then I'd use this command (without the bracketted stuff):

ffmpeg -i song.mp3 -t 300 [ending position in seconds] -ss 60 [starting position in seconds] -acodec copy shorter_song.mp3

That said, there may be gui programs out there whose entire purpose is snipping things off of mp3s, like there are for video files (avis), rather than full-featured editing programs. Those probably won't internally convert, as they'll pretty much use the same algorithms as ffmpeg (or even just be a frontend to them).

One way to guess if its internally converting: if it takes a minute or so to save the file, then it's probably encoding again. If it saves instantly, there's just no time.

ETA: Audacity definitely internally converts. At least the Mac version does, and I'd assume it's the same for the Windows/Linux versions.


amych - Apr 08, 2005 7:23:56 pm PDT #2359 of 10003
Now let us crush something soft and watch it fountain blood. That is a girlish thing to want to do, yes?

Audacity definitely internally converts.

Huh. That's what I get for paying so very much attention. Thank you.


beth b - Apr 08, 2005 7:24:59 pm PDT #2360 of 10003
oh joy! Oh Rapture ! I have a brain!

accourding to my DH adobe audition should let you go in and edit an mp3 - he was going to check on this to make sure - however - his pager just went off - more info to follow if there is time


Gris - Apr 08, 2005 7:36:23 pm PDT #2361 of 10003
Hey. New board.

If you need a windows version of the commandline ffmpeg tool, which is a surprisingly useful little program, you can get it here: [link]

If you need a Mac version, you can get it through darwinports or fink, I believe. Or you can take the binary out of the application resources for ffmpegX, a gui for it and a bunch of other software that is aimed at working with video files.


NoiseDesign - Apr 08, 2005 10:30:33 pm PDT #2362 of 10003
Our wings are not tired

Jon, this will do what you want and it does not decode/encode when it does it. All the work is done in the native MP3 format.


Jon B. - Apr 09, 2005 4:16:06 am PDT #2363 of 10003
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

Thank you Nova & ND (and everyone else for trying)!


Nutty - Apr 10, 2005 3:56:42 pm PDT #2364 of 10003
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

Hello, all. So, say you work on an ancient dialup at home. And you have a fairly old Netscape and IE version 6.0.xxx as browsers. Say that the Netscape has a habit of crashing, so you don't use it often, but that since yesterday IE has been on the fritz.

(Notably, a page will load, go to the proper background color, create a vertical scrollbar, and then be Done and blank. Sometimes, if I scroll to the bottom, the text on the page appears, but mostly it doesn't. Much more of a problem on complex pages like Yahoo mail and Boston.com, but just now b.org succumbed to it as well.)

1. Any ideas WTF?

2. What browser should I download that will not go on the fritz on my elderly, slow-connection machine?

All advice appreciated (I will be fine at work; this is the home machine).


Steph L. - Apr 10, 2005 4:03:41 pm PDT #2365 of 10003
I look more rad than Lutheranism

Nutty, is Ye Olde Computron a Mac or a PC? And what OS are you running?

In either case, have you tried Opera?

(Other suggestions might be forthcoming based on what type of system you have.)


Nutty - Apr 10, 2005 4:08:15 pm PDT #2366 of 10003
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

PC, Win 98 Plus. Haven't updated a thing in years, and had hoped to get away with that for many years hence.

I will not point out that Netscape has not yet crashed on me, because if I do, it promptly will.


Steph L. - Apr 10, 2005 4:12:06 pm PDT #2367 of 10003
I look more rad than Lutheranism

Hmm. I would just try downloading Internet Explorer SP if that's not the version you're using (it's basically the version for anyone not running Windows XP).