Hi Marie,
Your original post raised a couple of questions:
1) Won't Quadriga work in real time? I'm pretty certain that a
colleague of mine uses Quadriga to scan files as they are being
digitized. In real-time mode the file size doesn't matter (I think).
2) It sounds like you are doing destructive editing. Why?
THX
Corey
Corey Bailey Audio Engineering
At 12:54 PM 11/25/2010, you wrote:
>Sorry that my email was as 'clear as mud'! I have now resolved the problem
>and everything is back to normal.
>
>Cheers
>Marie
>
>On Thu, Nov 25, 2010 at 9:21 PM, Marie O'Connell <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> > We use Wavelab as our digital editor and Quadriga as our Audio file
> > Inspector. When we have files greater than 2GB they are simply
> not accepted
> > in Quadriga, I am not concerned with this presently. The method we use is
> > to split these files in Wavelab and give them persistent
> identifier codes to
> > represent this.
> >
> > One new staff member, our Accessions person unfortunately was not shown the
> > correct procedure to split files using Wavelab. It seems to me
> that she has
> > cut the file which is stereo and then pasted it into a mono New
> wavelab file
> > and the saved it that way.
> >
> > These files are born digital and downloaded from NZ radio stations. Now
> > that we no longer have the original second part of the original stereo
> > download, what is the suggestion as to fix up the second part, of the split
> > (which is now mono) to fix this problem, considering the original part had
> > now been "saved as" in a new format?
> >
> > Marie
> >
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