Je suis sous Linux. A l’aide de Jack, j’ai enregistrer un flux, d’un site que je ne nommerais pas
Lorsque j’ecoute le fichier wave, un son coupe l’ecoute apres qlq secondes… sauf si je l’ecoute sous Audacity (oui, il est trop fort). En revanche j’ai beau l’exporter, le modifier et l’enregistrer rien n’y fait j’ai toujours cet “effet”…
Comment qu’il fait l’audacity pour le couper. Y a t il un moyen de le visualiser ? de le virer ? Faut il installer un pluggin ou autre ?
Oui… curieux hein… je vais essayer d’extraire une partie et le mettre en lien.
Quelque soit d’ailleur l’endroit ou je le taillle, etc… ca le fait toujours apres 4 secondes, no more, no less.
Please state what distribution of Linux you are on (e.g. Ubuntu 10.10) and what version of Audacity (Help > About Audacity, all three numbers). There are export bugs in older Beta versions of Audacity.
It is also possible the audio itself is corrupted with excessively high sample values. If this happens the export will sound silent after the first high sample value occurs. In fact, after this point it is all -1.0 samples (a flat line at the bottom of the track). In this case you should compile HEAD Audacity, which has a possible fix, or on Ubuntu / Debian you can obtain the NIghtly Build ( http://wiki.audacityteam.org/wiki/Nightly_Builds#Linux_.2F_Unix ) .
If you save a project (.aup) that contains the recording and attach the .aup file, then I can tell if there are excessive sample values. Even better you could save a project that has just the first six seconds of audio. Before saving the project, copy the audio in at File > Check Dependencies. Make a zip file containing the .aup file and _data folder and upload it to a file transfer site: