![]() Audacity was released in 2000 by Dominic Mazzoni and Roger Dannenberg but has been updated with many new features Audacity’s user interface looks similar to ProTools (a top-rated audio editing program) because it was modeled after it. I don’t think they would add a version with telemetry when the time comes. Audacity is available for Windows, Mac OSX, and GNU/Linux as well. A lot of them look like something made for techno, loops etc, which is just too narrow and useless and overdone if you play something non-programmed and the only thing you need to program is the metronome.Īs for the firewall thing, my version of Audacity comes from my distro’s app store and I’m sticking with that. Also, for recording channel by channel, Audacity (or Adobe Audition) are really the simplest and easiest, if you’re a musician you’re not a programmer or a gamer and many DAWs are too complicated and convoluted for comfortable work. Also there’s noise reduction, amplifying only certain parts, fade in/out, it’s just easier when you have the final product in front of you. Say you’re making an album, you decide what you want on tracks for one song, then simply apply the same presets to tracks from all songs. ![]() Reaper is good, using it too, but I do prefer “destructive” editing.
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