MIDI Life Crisis wrote:zed wrote:
I use Audio Hijack Pro to capture my Mp3 mixes from DP. A great tool. It is much much easier to just engage the record button of Audio Hijack Pro and have it capture everything without futzing around with DP settings.
I have AHP as well, but what's so difficult about hitting the bounce button in DP and saving to MP3? If you have routing issues or freezing a lot of VI's is problematic, I can see AHP as a solution, but that happens in realtime with AHP. Bouncing in DP happens in virtual time and can be an immense time saver when you are sending cues or other stuff out to clients for review. A 45 minute soundtrack will take AHP 45 minutes to capture. DP will export than in probably under 5 minutes - more likely less on a faster machine.
Seriously, zed, the MP3 export and bounce from DP is really a much more efficient way to go unless you have a specific reason why a project needs to be captured externally.
Well in the situation you have described with a really lengthy project, I can see how doing a bounce would be a real time saver, but since you have to then listen to the entire thing carefully, it seems like it could potentially be a less efficient way to output mixes, since if you do it live with Audio Hijack you can hear instantly if something is sounding right and can make adjustments while the mix is being captured.
Like TooDamnHip, I would be hesitant to trust that the bounce and that all elements will render properly with this method. However, my projects are not lengthy. They are regular songs which are short and which I would want to hear exactly as being captured so that I can adjust the levels on the fly, or start over if necessary.
More important than that, just as a general advantage to using Audio Hijack, is that I can capture my noodling on the keyboard (or something coming into a microphone) without actually recording a track to DP. Audio Hijack just sits there like a tape recorder and captures reference information for me when I want it. And furthermore, sometimes I want to capture a sample of a DP project which is NOT the way I want it to be saved (like with some replaced alternate instruments I am experimenting with, or maybe a weird mistake that sounds sort of cool which I want to remember).
When all is said and done, Audio Hijack is so easy to use. One button pressed and I know exactly what I'm gonna get. I have tried the DP bounce to Mp3 thing in the past and had problems with it, so there doesn't seem to be much point for me to fiddle around with trying to get DP to do what I want under the hood, when all I need to do is capture playback.
I believe the quality of the captured audio is pretty much identical, either way. Not a bad idea to be able to use both methods depending on the situation.
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Please let's all try to get along here and not assume too much about the "attitude" of others. Like you just mentioned MLC (with a smiley face), your posts can sometimes be abrasive as well. I'm pretty sure TooDamnHip wasn't intending to rub you the wrong way.