View Full Version : Teamspeak Recordings
Firefly
2004-01-24, 12:19 PM
My outfit is working on a mini-movie. Someone in my outfit may know this, but I thought I might double-tap the questions here, since there is a broad array of technically proficient dudes here.
First question: where are the recordings from Teamspeak kept?
Second question: for the people that have made films before, how do you add voice-overs to the film? Does it interfere with any background music you may choose to add?
Firefly
2004-01-25, 09:58 AM
Okay fifty threads ahead of this one and no replies. Thanks a million guys! That answers my question!
Smaug
2004-01-25, 01:14 PM
No reason to be a jerk about it. Maybe nobody could answer your questions and then it just got bumped off the page.
Regarding teamspeak recordings, when you click start recording a save as box will pop up, so you can save it anywhere you want.
Rbstr
2004-01-25, 01:33 PM
if i know nothing at all about a question I normaly don't post
Firefly
2004-01-25, 03:12 PM
No reason to be a jerk about it.
Sure there is. I could have left it buried ten posts below and never found anything out. I make a smart-ass jerk remark and what do I get? Two fresh posts. Closer-ever am I to finding the answer. Reason enough for me.
Have a nice day. :D
Smaug
2004-01-25, 05:02 PM
Or you could have been civilized and just put a simple "bump".
Your answer to the second one.
I'm not sure how to keep the background noise with the music but when you add music just put it in the audio bar under the scene or scenes where you want it to play and ajdust the length.
Edit: This is for Adobe Premier.
Marsman
2004-01-25, 06:51 PM
Generally you demux the audio from the clip and then apply whatever audio editing you need and then remux it for the final product.
Firefly
2004-01-25, 07:00 PM
I'm sorry... what's demux and remux?
Rbstr
2004-01-25, 07:12 PM
typo of remix and demix? 'u' and 'i' are right next to each other
Marsman
2004-01-25, 08:05 PM
no, when you demux a clip - you seperate the clip into video and audio components
(seperate files) - remux is the opposite process.
Firefly
2004-01-25, 08:08 PM
Thanks.
Marsman
2004-01-25, 08:13 PM
np - actually I am misusing the remux term - should be called just mux
mux is short for multiplexing (a combining) so to demux is to seperate, and to mux is to combine. I suppose that since it was muxed once, then demuxed, it might be considered a remux in this situation. Here is a link for the terms: http://www.afterdawn.com/glossary/terms/demux.cfm
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