Comments

farss wrote on 9/8/2007, 6:06 PM
Probably NOT a polite comparison to be making unless you want people here making some rather obvious other feature comparisons.

Bob.

DataMeister wrote on 9/8/2007, 7:37 PM
Perhaps not. And to be slightly fair, that healing brush for audio looks really cool. That's an interface method that I wouldn't mind showing up in Sound Forge.

Plus if it matters, Cool Edit Pro was my favorite audio app before I started using Vegas/Sound Forge. And I still kind of like the way the noise reduction filter worked in CEP better than the Sony NR2 plugin now bundled with Sound Forge. It seemed to give better results without much tweaking.

I imagine if my main focus was purely on audio recording instead of video I would likely still be keeping an updated copy in my tool box.


fwtep wrote on 9/8/2007, 9:21 PM
I saw that healing brush in another package about 5 years ago. I had the demo and it was really cool, but that was on a different machine, so I can't check the name of it, and I've forgotten.
barleycorn wrote on 9/9/2007, 1:31 PM
I was very disappointed that Sound Forge 9.0 didn't have a static spectral view (as also found in Wavelab). It had better be in Sound Forge 10...