Subscriber Brandon Tanner writes: "Gizmo, I know you recommend Audacity [1] for audio editing. It’s a great product but you should check out Kristal; I think it might have Audacity’s number! To start with, Kristal has an ASIO driver while Audacity doesn’t. That means that you can monitor your pre-recorded tracks in real-time while you’re overdubbing new ones, mandatory when multi-track recording. You can’t do that in Audacity as the latency is too high. Second, Kristal supports VST plug-ins. There are tons of quality VST effects and instruments floating around the net, a lot of them free. Audacity’s effects are…. err ummm… not quite up to par with some of the better VST ones. Not to bash Audacity but I have to give credit where credit’s due. Third, Kristal has a ‘proper’ multi-track mixer, with a lot more options for routing individual tracks, effects, etc. Don’t get me wrong, I like Audacity and I think it’s a good program as long as your needs are basic. But Kristal definitely has more ‘pro’ features." Great suggestion, Brandon. Kristal is based on a 32-bit floating point audio engine that can handle sample rates of 44 to 192 kHz with word sizes of 16, 24 or 32 bit. It comes with a three band parametric EQ and supports WAVE, AIFF, FLAC, OGG Vorbis file formats. It can only handle a maximum of 16 audio tracks, though the web site mentions an upcoming version 2 that will handle more tracks as well as support for MIDI, virtual instruments, and a wider range of VST plugins. Like all media editing programs, Kristal requires a modern fast PC. Don’t even think about using it with a sub 1Ghz machine. Free for personal use, Win 98/ME with IE6, Win2K, XP, 3.51MB.
[1] http://audacity.sourceforge.net/
[2] http://www.kreatives.org/kristal/
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