Täglich bieten wir KOSTENLOSE lizenzierte Software an, die ihr sonst bezahlen müsstet!
Cool Record Edit Pro 9.1.4 war am 12. Juni 2016! als Giveaway verfügbar!
Cool Record Edit Pro hilft euch beim Übertragen von Kassetten, LPs, Internet Radio, TV, DVD und anderen Soundquellen auf eure Festplatte. Schützt eure wertvollen Aufnahmen - einfach nur die Soundquelle wählen, Qualität und Lautstärke wählen und Aufnahme starten. Der Editor ermöglicht das Ausführen von etlichen Operationen wie z.B. Wellenanzeige, Anwenden von Spezialeffekten usw.
Das Tool bietet euch eine Menge Bearbeitungsfunktionen: Schneiden, Kopieren, Einfügen, Trimmen, Mischen usw. So könnt ihr unerwünschte Teile einer Audiodatei entfernen, Tracks mischen, Lesezeichen bzw. Region-Tag hinzufügen und diverse Operationen rückgängig machen bzw. wiederholen - auf die Millisekunde genau!
Die interessanteste Aufgabe ist es jedoch, eure Audiodatei aufzupeppen und ihr Stil zu verleihen - mit Hilfe von Fade In und Fade Out-Effekten, Echo, diversen Filtern oder von Verstärken, Normalisieren, Angleichen usw. Ihr könnt eigene CDs mit anpassbaren Menüs und Brenngeschwindigkeit erstellen.
Windows XP/ Vista/ 7/ 8/ 8.1/ 10
19.6 MB
$39.99
A BIG belated thank you to (deep breath) Lennie, Annie, ozsyd, JerrywithaJ, Robert, Dan O, webeye, rww, Robert (again), mike and tk for riding to the rescue and in all their different ways offering free help, advice, tips and even links to help me figure out how to use this software with an external cassette player. Apologies to all from this non-technical person for not being able to contribute a review and for taking up space on this thread but the very least I can do is express my gratitude to all those GOTDers who have been such a fantastic help to me today!
McAfee LiveSafe blocked the trial download of Cool Record Edit Pro, so I monitored the install of the GOTD in my XP Mode VM. Don't know what, if anything is included with the trial, but the GOTD of course is clean, without any hints of what the problem might be [which is partly what I was after].
Recording the Cool Record Edit Pro installation, I got: 123 files added, 2 files deleted, 15 files updated, 6285 registry entries added, 96 registry entries deleted, 16 registry entries updated. As possible I use the XP Pro VM for monitoring installs, because in 7-10 installations typically add more registry entries, whereas XP sticks more to the basics -- IOW you could expect a lot more than 6k new entries in 7 & especially 10.
That high number of new registry entries reflects Cool Record Edit Pro using NCT files -- from what I could tell in the past Googling, they're older, apparently abandonware. And yes they effect media handling in Windows, while their potential effects on other software depends on whether that software is self-contained or uses Direct Show/Direct Audio files installed in Windows. As far as how well those NCT files work, they're better than some, worse than others, so it really depends on how much you're into audio, & the quality of whatever other software you've installed.
Otherwise Cool Record Edit Pro is easy to use, but it's nothing special, & IMHO not up the level of Audacity or Wavosaur, both of which are available as portable. You can spend Loads of money on audio software & gear, but music is something that loads of people avidly pursue at home, so there's also an awful lot of free software, FX & filters, and hardware hacks you can find online. To take advantage of those FX &/or filters you need software that will use plugins -- Audacity & Wavosaur will, while apps like Cool Record Edit Pro will not.
The ad copy says: "Record audio from any input losslessly"
AFAIK the only way to do that is to save the incoming stream, whether it's a TV signal from a tuner or a stream from Youtube etc. Anything external is subject to the quality of the hardware or equipment used. Recording speaker out -- whatever is playing on your device -- is subject to whatever processing the audio goes through before it heads to the speakers [headphones etc.]. Usually the results aren't too bad, but lossless it's not, which is why some people go through extra effort as necessary to save the actual stream. OTOH you might use DSP software or whatever FX to enhance the audio that's played, & recorded.
In order to record audio playing on your device ideally you just select that as the input in either the software you're using or with Windows audio recording control. Some devices have recording from speakers or playback disabled as a means of DRM -- turning it on can be as simple as going through the properties settings for the device in Windows audio recording control, e.g. commonly with Realtek audio you just have to enable the Stereo Mix.
When that isn't possible some people have found that running/installing the driver setup files from another brand PC, laptop, or motherboard etc. using the identical audio chipset works -- if you Google with your make & model you might find a driver set that works, or perhaps even a simple registry edit that'll do the trick. If that doesn't work you might add audio hardware, e.g. a soundcard or external USB device, but not every one will allow you to record of playing audio, so research beforehand. Or you can try to use a simple cable, perhaps with a volume control &/or splitter, to send the headphone or speaker output to the microphone in jack. Or you can find universal audio drivers just for this sort of recording online, &/or it's included with some recording software.
- This is not Cool Edit Pro- make no mistake about it or get confused by a look a like program name. google for more info on patents and costs...
I'd zero install or register issues (Win 7 Pro- despise Win 10!). I seriously like this, though I haven't had time to do more than just some cursory dabbling with it, it looks very pro about what it can do, and I was in broadcasting for over 20 years. I've been using Audacity for about a decade, and haven't really seen much improvement in that program at all in all that time, and the learning curve for the inexperienced can be very intimidating. Not so much with this. It appears to have all of Audacity's features, plus a few extras, such as the You Tube DL, though since this isn't updateable probably will not work long, if it even does now, as You Tube's parent company Goo-Goo (I despise spyware laden Google anything- same reason I hate Win 10) chnges it's coding on a practically daily basis to prevent DL's. All in all this is a serious keeper, but I'll keep Audacity around til I know for sure. TANX!
I am not clever at tech so excuse my ignorance! People on here have said they'll use today's giveaway "because it seems good" but no-one has yet explained in what way it is good. I have a large collection of music cassettes I would dearly love to digitize. But. . . how? I have a Sony Walkman. How do I get the cassette tracks being played by that or by any other cassette machine onto my PC? The developer says today's software can handle audio from any source but just how does one link that source to a computer in the first place? (Apologies if I'm being stupid.)
SarahB,
You will need a cassette player with line out. You connect this to your computer using a stereo cable and then use a free software like Audacity to record it. I am not familiar with today's offering so I can not comment on that. You can use a mic connected to your computer and use your walkman but the quality will be awful. Hope someone else comes up with a better suggestion.
Die Seriennummer ist im READ.ME aber der User fehlt: GiveawayoftheDay
Es wird die Version 9.15 nachgeladen mit jeder Menge Bloatware!
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Ich nutze die Version aus 1996, die machte ihrem Namen alle Ehre! Da ich noch einen alten XP-PC habe, bleibe ich auch dabei, sonst hätte ich heute zugeschlagen. Die Uralt-Version reicht für meine Zwecke, die kenne ich. Never touch a running system...
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Versagt unter Win XP. Schmeißt nach Installation beim Starten einen unschönen Fehler: AppName: coolrecordeditpro.exe AppVer: 0.0.0.0 ModName: kernel32.dll
ModVer: 5.1.2600.6532 Offset: 00012fd3.
Sehr unschön.
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Nicht installieren! Es wird versucht mehrere Adware/Malware zu installieren. Zu dem wollen die Dinge wissen, die die nichts angeht! Ich beziehe mich auf den Download direkt beim Hersteller. Es lädt eine nur 912 KB große Datei herunter, wenn man diese startet wird ein sogenannter Downloadmanager gestartet, welcher versucht Malware und Adware mit unterzujubeln. Auch die eigentliche Datei versucht dann nochmals Malware unterzujubeln. Das Programm ist somit ein absolutes NOGO!
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