<html><head></head><body>I think they are great tools and used wisely they will help you a lot. On the other hand you can end up with a guy who has forgotten that a tool is but a tool and makes you do stupid things because the tool tells to do so... ...and there are people that do stupid things despite being warned by the tool. In the end it depends on your knowledge what a tool can do for you.<br><br><div class="gmail_quote">Am 22. Februar 2016 16:31:04 MEZ, schrieb Niko Efthymiou <nefthy@nefthy.de>:<blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); padding-left: 1ex;">
<pre class="k9mail">On 22.02.2016 13:52, Ralf Mardorf wrote:<br /><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin: 0pt 0pt 1ex 0.8ex; border-left: 1px solid #729fcf; padding-left: 1ex;"> Important is what we hear, measurements we see are overrated.<br /></blockquote><br />I disagree. Visualizations and measurements like the analysis on export, <br />could have saved me quite some time on past projects.<br /><br />Just think about a stray peek making your mix 10db quieter than it would <br />be without that peak and the Band whining that the mix is way to quiet <br />(true story). I would have cought that in a glimse with waveform <br />display. Using my ears only, I have to listen to the export, listen to <br />references, compare, make up a theory why my mix is 10db too quiet, try <br />to fix it, rinse and repeat until I come up with the idea of inspecting <br />the exported waveform in some wave editing software...<br /><br />Or imagine problems like DC offset because, some plugin is not behaving <br />or you parameters are outrageous. I don't know about your ears, but mine <br />definitively can't hear DC offset (and yes this has happened to me and <br />it was a visual inspection that brought the problem to my attention</pre></blockquote></div><br>
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