The all-new "HELP! I have an Audacity problem" thread
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Good afternoon -
I'm using Audacity on a Mac. When I save my AUB file, it produces a separate directory that contains the same name as the project and is apparently being saved in tandem it. And when I go into this directory, there are several subdirectories containing lots of MBs of space that have been saved—almost as if the entire history of my edits to the recording are being accounted for. I'm still a novice to Audacity and to making recordings for Librivox, so I had a few questions if anyone happens to have some insight into this:
1a.) Are these supplementary files necessary to the AUB project file? I'm worried that if I delete these "phantom directories" that when I have to go back months from now to edit a chapter for a longterm Librivox project, I'll be locked out of the AUB file because of some nebulous link between the AUB file and these "phantom directories".
1b.) If these files aren't necessary, is there a setting in Audacity that I'm missing or something that I can adjust or checkmark so that these separate files don't get saved? As it stands now, a simple project can rack up hundreds of MBs of space in this seemingly unrelated file.
And as to general archiving of projects that other members do, I'm curious:
2a.) Is there really any point in saving the MP3 files after they've been uploaded to a Librivox project or is that just unnecessary archiving?
2b.) This question also applies to the projects. Is there a reason that Librivox recorders can think of in which it would make sense to preserve the AUB files once the recording has been uploaded to Librivox?...How likely and how frequent is it that a post-publication amendment is made to a Librivox recording?
Thank you!
Daniel
I'm using Audacity on a Mac. When I save my AUB file, it produces a separate directory that contains the same name as the project and is apparently being saved in tandem it. And when I go into this directory, there are several subdirectories containing lots of MBs of space that have been saved—almost as if the entire history of my edits to the recording are being accounted for. I'm still a novice to Audacity and to making recordings for Librivox, so I had a few questions if anyone happens to have some insight into this:
1a.) Are these supplementary files necessary to the AUB project file? I'm worried that if I delete these "phantom directories" that when I have to go back months from now to edit a chapter for a longterm Librivox project, I'll be locked out of the AUB file because of some nebulous link between the AUB file and these "phantom directories".
1b.) If these files aren't necessary, is there a setting in Audacity that I'm missing or something that I can adjust or checkmark so that these separate files don't get saved? As it stands now, a simple project can rack up hundreds of MBs of space in this seemingly unrelated file.
And as to general archiving of projects that other members do, I'm curious:
2a.) Is there really any point in saving the MP3 files after they've been uploaded to a Librivox project or is that just unnecessary archiving?
2b.) This question also applies to the projects. Is there a reason that Librivox recorders can think of in which it would make sense to preserve the AUB files once the recording has been uploaded to Librivox?...How likely and how frequent is it that a post-publication amendment is made to a Librivox recording?
Thank you!
Daniel
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Yes, they're necessary. They're little bits and pieces of the recording. The main AUP file is a road map for putting all those little pieces back together in the right order.JachinandBoaz wrote: ↑July 9th, 2020, 10:44 am Good afternoon -
I'm using Audacity on a Mac. When I save my AUB file, it produces a separate directory that contains the same name as the project and is apparently being saved in tandem it. And when I go into this directory, there are several subdirectories containing lots of MBs of space that have been saved—almost as if the entire history of my edits to the recording are being accounted for. I'm still a novice to Audacity and to making recordings for Librivox, so I had a few questions if anyone happens to have some insight into this:
1a.) Are these supplementary files necessary to the AUB project file? I'm worried that if I delete these "phantom directories" that when I have to go back months from now to edit a chapter for a longterm Librivox project, I'll be locked out of the AUB file because of some nebulous link between the AUB file and these "phantom directories".
1b.) If these files aren't necessary, is there a setting in Audacity that I'm missing or something that I can adjust or checkmark so that these separate files don't get saved? As it stands now, a simple project can rack up hundreds of MBs of space in this seemingly unrelated file.
I don't save Archive files. I export my files as FLAC (which is lossless), and re-import them back into Audacity whenever I want to edit or continue recording. FLAC is smaller and just one file to deal with.
2a) It's good to save them for a while. If you look in the Error Reports forum, you can see times when recordings have been wrong (missed text, or it somehow got corrupted, or something) where it would be very handy for the reader to still have the file.And as to general archiving of projects that other members do, I'm curious:
2a.) Is there really any point in saving the MP3 files after they've been uploaded to a Librivox project or is that just unnecessary archiving?
2b.) This question also applies to the projects. Is there a reason that Librivox recorders can think of in which it would make sense to preserve the AUB files once the recording has been uploaded to Librivox?...How likely and how frequent is it that a post-publication amendment is made to a Librivox recording?
Thank you!
Daniel
2b) I don't save the Archive files, as I mentioned before. I do save my final, PL-OK MP3 and the final FLAC file, which has the final edits but no noise removal or other post-processing.
There have been cases where something went wrong with the uploader/server/system. One time we lost a month's worth of data - posts, MP3s, and all. So I would at the VERY least keep the recording until the project is cataloged. But me, I've been keeping 'em since I started. Storage is cheap.
School fiction: David Blaize
America Exploration: The First Four Voyages of Amerigo Vespucci
Serial novel: The Wandering Jew
Medieval England meets Civil War Americans: Centuries Apart
America Exploration: The First Four Voyages of Amerigo Vespucci
Serial novel: The Wandering Jew
Medieval England meets Civil War Americans: Centuries Apart
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Thank you, TriciaG for that very informative post!
Daniel
Daniel
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When editing something with multiple tracks, how do you get the first track to "move" when playing and the other tracks to stay "locked" at 0:00.
On my current project, I have the stage directions in the first track, which I am going to edit everything else into, and the lines as the remaining tracks. I want to be able to move the stage directions along, while keeping the others where they are so I can then copy and paste stuff. Hope this makes sense.
On my current project, I have the stage directions in the first track, which I am going to edit everything else into, and the lines as the remaining tracks. I want to be able to move the stage directions along, while keeping the others where they are so I can then copy and paste stuff. Hope this makes sense.
A.M.B.
Between illnesses, work, and vacation, May wasn't my best Librivox month. But I'm back and ready to do some more recording, editing, and PLing!
Between illnesses, work, and vacation, May wasn't my best Librivox month. But I'm back and ready to do some more recording, editing, and PLing!
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Try clicking on Tracks / Sync-lock Tracks (on/off). That MIGHT be what you want.
If not, try Tracks / Align Tracks / Move Selection with Tracks (on/off).
If not, try Tracks / Align Tracks / Move Selection with Tracks (on/off).
School fiction: David Blaize
America Exploration: The First Four Voyages of Amerigo Vespucci
Serial novel: The Wandering Jew
Medieval England meets Civil War Americans: Centuries Apart
America Exploration: The First Four Voyages of Amerigo Vespucci
Serial novel: The Wandering Jew
Medieval England meets Civil War Americans: Centuries Apart
I find it much easier to open separate copies of Audacity for each input file rather than putting them into one file - where I would have the coordination troubles you are seeing. By being in separate Audacity windows, they are all independent, and I can move along the master file (originally the stage directions) in its window how ever I wish while I cut and paste my way along each of the other reader files in their windows.Ambsweet13 wrote: ↑July 21st, 2020, 1:12 pm When editing something with multiple tracks, how do you get the first track to "move" when playing and the other tracks to stay "locked" at 0:00.
On my current project, I have the stage directions in the first track, which I am going to edit everything else into, and the lines as the remaining tracks. I want to be able to move the stage directions along, while keeping the others where they are so I can then copy and paste stuff. Hope this makes sense.
Only time I use multiple tracks is when I am purposefully stacking tracks for multiple people talking at the same time. I have some stuff about that in viewtopic.php?f=27&t=44647&start=45
Thanks, Todd
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Thanks! Opeaning separate Audacity files seems like the easier way to do it.ToddHW wrote: ↑July 21st, 2020, 2:25 pmI find it much easier to open separate copies of Audacity for each input file rather than putting them into one file - where I would have the coordination troubles you are seeing. By being in separate Audacity windows, they are all independent, and I can move along the master file (originally the stage directions) in its window how ever I wish while I cut and paste my way along each of the other reader files in their windows.Ambsweet13 wrote: ↑July 21st, 2020, 1:12 pm When editing something with multiple tracks, how do you get the first track to "move" when playing and the other tracks to stay "locked" at 0:00.
On my current project, I have the stage directions in the first track, which I am going to edit everything else into, and the lines as the remaining tracks. I want to be able to move the stage directions along, while keeping the others where they are so I can then copy and paste stuff. Hope this makes sense.
Only time I use multiple tracks is when I am purposefully stacking tracks for multiple people talking at the same time. I have some stuff about that in viewtopic.php?f=27&t=44647&start=45
Thanks, Todd
A.M.B.
Between illnesses, work, and vacation, May wasn't my best Librivox month. But I'm back and ready to do some more recording, editing, and PLing!
Between illnesses, work, and vacation, May wasn't my best Librivox month. But I'm back and ready to do some more recording, editing, and PLing!
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Neither of these worked for the first audacity problem, but you must have read my mind, because sync lock tracks solved the next audacity problem: how to delete stuff in both the main track and the label track so the labels don't get messed up.
A.M.B.
Between illnesses, work, and vacation, May wasn't my best Librivox month. But I'm back and ready to do some more recording, editing, and PLing!
Between illnesses, work, and vacation, May wasn't my best Librivox month. But I'm back and ready to do some more recording, editing, and PLing!
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I HOPE this is a simple question (with a simple answer) to save myself a little time. I know we're aiming for 89db for our exported mp3 files, but is there any way to check this PRIOR to exporting to the .mp3 file? So I don't have to export, do the check, perhaps go back to Audacity and crank up the volume, export again to .mp3, check again, and hope it's at 89 and above? (I'm kind of new to the editing end of it, so I try to keep things simple) Thanks
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If you prefer you can use the Replay Gain plugin in directly in Audacity to tell you how much your file needs to be amplified to get to 89 db. Instructions here:
https://wiki.librivox.org/index.php/Measuring_Volume_within_Audacity
https://wiki.librivox.org/index.php/Measuring_Volume_within_Audacity
Jo
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Yes there is! It's called ReplayGain. Here is a link for more info and to download: https://wiki.librivox.org/index.php?title=Measuring_Volume_within_AudacityBrizeCrize wrote: ↑July 24th, 2020, 12:31 pm I HOPE this is a simple question (with a simple answer) to save myself a little time. I know we're aiming for 89db for our exported mp3 files, but is there any way to check this PRIOR to exporting to the .mp3 file? So I don't have to export, do the check, perhaps go back to Audacity and crank up the volume, export again to .mp3, check again, and hope it's at 89 and above? (I'm kind of new to the editing end of it, so I try to keep things simple) Thanks
Installation is a bit of a bugger, because you need to make sure it's in the right folder, and then you have to go in to Audacity and enable it before you can use it. That's why I don't usually recommend it to brand new readers. But it's very handy to have. I use it all the time, in fact!
(Cross-posted with Jo)
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BrizeCrize, roughly speaking, what you do is what I do every time .... except that you don't need that final check on volume. So: export as mp3, leaving Audacity open; carry the mp3 into checker, note how much the volume needs to be adjusted; delete the test mp3 file; return to the file in Audacity, select all, make the volume adjustment. The result will be within a decimal point or two of the correct volume.
(At this point, I carry out noise removal.)
Export the final mp3 and rename it for upload.
Peter
(At this point, I carry out noise removal.)
Export the final mp3 and rename it for upload.
Peter
"I think, therefore I am, I think." Solomon Cohen, in Terry Pratchett's Dodger
See Tricia's reply here for your options -BrizeCrize wrote: ↑July 24th, 2020, 12:31 pm I HOPE this is a simple question (with a simple answer) to save myself a little time. I know we're aiming for 89db for our exported mp3 files, but is there any way to check this PRIOR to exporting to the .mp3 file? So I don't have to export, do the check, perhaps go back to Audacity and crank up the volume, export again to .mp3, check again, and hope it's at 89 and above? (I'm kind of new to the editing end of it, so I try to keep things simple) Thanks
viewtopic.php?f=23&t=78791&p=1693888&hilit=check+volume#p1693888
Checking the volume of your file will likely be the least time consuming part of the editing process. I use Checker. It tells me how far from 89 dB I am. I can amplify the file by the required amount either + or - and have it exactly at 89 dB in less time it took to type this. It does require saving the file twice, but that only takes seconds even for a long recording.
Fritz
"A small daily task, if it be really daily, will beat the labors of a spasmodic Hercules."
Trollope
"A small daily task, if it be really daily, will beat the labors of a spasmodic Hercules."
Trollope
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Yes, Zoom sucks. It doesn’t replace face-to-face at all. (It also apparently messes with librivox.)KevinS wrote: ↑June 11th, 2020, 9:03 am Y'all ought to hear me cuss!
I had to do one of those Zoom meetings for the first time last night. Didn't care for the experience really, but that's beside the point.
Today I recorded about thirty minutes of material and the ends of many of the words are getting cut off. To be fair, the computer insisted on updating something last night, too, but that seems to happen often enough without ill effects.
So, I don't know what to do. I assume I will remove the Zoom program entirely and maybe re-load Audacity. Maybe I'll install my new modem too. If I'm not around for a day or two, you'll know what happened.
Errrrggghhhhh.
2 Timothy 1:7. Look it up.
Specializing in Middle-Earth, classics, and art🖌
Specializing in Middle-Earth, classics, and art🖌
Suggestion: make sure Zoom is completely shut down before running Audacity again. Windows, Mac and Linux all offer ways to show all programs that are running, even if they are lurking in the background.
Rich Brown - Minneapolis, MN