I'm using my old tried and true Sonic Foundry ACID Music 2.0. Sonic Foundry sold out to Sony, so if you've lost the activation codes to permanently unlock the software AND all the plug-ins for effects and MP3 coding, you are pretty much shit out of luck if you want to install it another machine or something happens and your hard drive shits itself.
Quote from: [EoM]Focalor on November 28, 2007, 09:03:50 PMI'm using my old tried and true Sonic Foundry ACID Music 2.0. Sonic Foundry sold out to Sony, so if you've lost the activation codes to permanently unlock the software AND all the plug-ins for effects and MP3 coding, you are pretty much shit out of luck if you want to install it another machine or something happens and your hard drive shits itself.Sony has been good to me in that regard. They transferred Sonic Foundry's customer database over... When I upgraded to new hardware and reinstalled the OS, my old Sonic Foundry Sound Forge 5.0 wouldn't register anymore. I called up sony and gave them my registration code, and they found my info in their database quickly. I was thinking of hacking the registry to make it work, but I'm glad I called. They said, yeah a technical issue prevents Sound Forge 5.0 from being registered anymore, so how about we upgrade you to 7.0?So I got a free Sound Forge upgrade, which made me happy.Currently I use: ACID Pro 6.0 Sound Forge 7.0In the 80's / 90's I used to use a Tascam 4-track, then a Tascam 8-track. (both cassette-based)P.S. newer versions of ACID allow you to chain all sorts of F/X on each track in realtime. It also lets you create various F/X, volume, and pan envelopes which in effect become a kind of automated fader style mixing - except you're drawing curves rather than moving faders...Regards,quadz
Tascam 424