steve wrote:scott wrote:B) to have every virtual track exported as a single wav, comprised of all the edits/crossfades that may have been enacted on all the punched sections, etc., with leading silence so they all start at the zero mark
Yeah, nobody does this. It would be better, of course, but nobody does it.
The only time (so far) that I've recorded a band and they wanted to have somebody else to the mix, this is what they asked for and what we delivered. I didn't know that it's actually super easy to do in Samplitude, and as such I spent maybe 3 hours worth of adding silence, dragging tracks, and exporting. If I knew how to do it, it would've only taken me probably 5 or 10 minutes. Now that I know, I know. Fucking Samplitude, written by robot-minded, utterly non-user-friendly Germans!
If the day came that it looked like the PC/Windows format was ending, or the existence of the Samplitude program was about to be negated, I'm sure we'd do the same with all the sessions we have right now. Unless there was a nuclear explosion/EMP whatnot, the computers we have on hand would serve the task, as would the copy of Samplitude that's installed right now and could be installed in the future. Until that day comes, we don't really *need* to do it. Just archiving the sessions and wav data is enough.