Comments

Chienworks wrote on 2/7/2005, 11:33 AM
Usually you get to it by creating a new audio project (opening up a .wav file will do) and rendering it to a new MP3 file. Is this what you've tried already?
badger wrote on 2/7/2005, 11:38 AM
Yes, I've tried that. The manual says its supposed to take me to a MPEG template, which it doesn't do. According to the manual, that's how you get to the registration wizard so you can enter the activation code. I've tried this on already established .veg files. Maybe I'll try opening a new project and try it. Any other ideas?
badger wrote on 2/7/2005, 11:45 AM
Tried it and it didn't work. There is no phone support for Vegas 2.0, only email support and they have been slow getting back to me. This coudn't happen at a worse time. I'm pitching some songs and I can't burn cd's without rendering to mp3. At this point I'm open to almost anything.
drbam wrote on 2/7/2005, 12:10 PM
Just convert your wav files to mp3 in a different program. On these forums I often hear about some very good freeware or shareware apps that are specifically designed to work with mp3. I haven't used any of them (SF has worked fine for me) but perhaps someone here can recommend something specific??

drbam

ps: Just curious, why is it necessary to pitch your songs as mp3s?
badger wrote on 2/7/2005, 12:13 PM
I need to physically deliver CD. Can't burn CD without mp3 format.
Chienworks wrote on 2/7/2005, 4:17 PM
What are you burning with? Most burning applications will accept WAV files. Why would you degrade and compress you songs when you're delivering them on CDs? Whatever you're doing, stop doing it! ;)
badger wrote on 2/7/2005, 11:00 PM
You were right Chienworks. I rendered .veg files to WAV and burner accepted. What was I thinking? I sure appreciate your help. Now, I have another problem, but I'll post a new topic for that one.