While most other tools doing this split automatically according to certain criteria, AudioSlicer shows you all silences within a certain range of duration. You can then listen to the silence - well, to the audio before and after the silence really - and then you decide if you want to split there. The splitting is done without loss, there is no decoding and re-encoding of audio data taking place.
Split files
An audio file is the file you want to split into pieces. You’ll be working with one audio file at a time since one split file is referenced to exactly one audio file. No matter what you do in AudioSlicer, your audio file will remain unchanged.
You may think of a split file as your project file. It holds information about where you want to split the audio file. Whenever you work with AudioSlicer, you’re editing your split file. When you save an AudioSlicer document, you’re saving a split file. The split file does not contain the audio file, it references to it. For this reason, split files don’t take much space on your disk.
System Requirements
AudioSlicer 1.1 is compatible with Mac OS X 10.3 and above, and supports natively both PowerPC and Intel Macs.
Mac OS X 10.3 is the minimum system required. The latest OS version available from Apple is recommended.
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