Thank you so much, Rob. This is precisely what I needed to know.Incidentally, because some of the cassettes I digitize need equalization help, I sometimes use the equalizer in Goldwave to accomplish this. I am so glad that when I use Goldwave's equalizer, the various types of marks used in Studio Recorder are left intact. This is not a crusade for an equalizer. I am merely pointing out that if equalization is called for, you can safely do so using Goldwave without fear of losing Studio Recorder marks.
Don Roberts On 10/9/2013 9:11 AM, Rob Meredith wrote:
Hi Don, You can put a plus sign (+) or minus sign (-) before the specified time to move relative to the current position. You can also just hit = and SR will fill in the "+" for you and remember your last offset. Example: 1. press = (which is the plus sign unshifted) 2. type 44:15 3. Press Enter. In the future, you can just hit = and Enter to make the same jump. You can also hit - instead of = to move back. Marking the start of each side is also a good idea. If you are using Milestones (on by default), there is already a mark at the beginning of each subrecording in the file. Rob -----Original Message----- From: studiorecorder-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:studiorecorder-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Donald L. Roberts Sent: Wednesday, October 09, 2013 11:00 AM To: studiorecorder@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [studiorecorder] question about the go to command In my volunteer work, I transfer materials recorded on tape cassette to the hard drive using studio recorder. I record all of the tracks on a casette to one large file on the hard drive. The audio on each track is typically approximately 44 minutes 15 seconds in length. I am wondering whether there is any way using this command to move within the recorded material plus or minus 44 minutes 15 seconds. As it now stands, if I understand the command's use correctly, I must determine the cursor's current position and then add or subtract 44 minutes 15 seconds from that total. Thanks for any feedback. Don Roberts