![]() I’m definitely not updating it when they do. Thankfully they haven’t updated the snap or flatpak versions yet. However, it’s worth upgrading to for one critical reason: it’s an official, stable release. Maybe I’m not as familiar with Windows as I am with Linux (this, for most people is completely ass backwards…lol).īut yeah, I agree, the new exporter is trash. That’s right, Audacity 2 is little more than a stable version of the long-running beta That means if you’re currently running the latest version of the beta you won’t see anything radically different from what you’ve been used to by upgrading to version 2.0. I can load a hundred files in Audacity on Linux without a single issue, but for Windows 11 Pro, the software sucks ass. My computer is very powerful (32GB RAM, i7 Processor, 1TB NVMe SSD) and just editing a single 2-channel audio track temporarily freezes my computer. LAME compiles on Windows, DOS, GNU/Linux, MacOS X, BSD, Solaris, HP-UX, Tru64 Unix, AIX, Irix, NeXTstep, SCO Unix, UnixWare, Ultrix, Plan 9, OpenVMS, MacOS Classic, BeOS, QNX, RiscOS, AmigaOS, OS/2, SkyOS, FreeMiNT(Atari) and probably a few more. All the new additions in Audacity I can do in a DAW which, personally speaking, kinda makes the features useless.Īnother good point not mentioned in your comment is that the audacity team really needs to fix the issue with system resources on Windows. ![]() I also agree that the new export menu is completely balls.īut although the new features are useful to some people, at the end of the day, it’s an audio editor and not a DAW. Although I do admit that joining clips was easier the old way. ![]() Just highlight what needs joining and hit control+J. ![]()
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