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I've been using Cool Edit Pro on the PC for a few years now. Previously I've used tape, and had to edit out clicks in the audio with a razor blade. The capability for editing sound on a PC is almost magical. Transfering old 4-track masters to clean up and mix/master. Or taking a field recording and removing traffic noise, (then accurately re-creating the room ambience that was lost with removing the traffic noise, which was making the room resonate) Taking snippets of sound, and replicating, modifying, stretching into a whole composition. A user interface that allows you to see the waveform of the sound and move blocks of sound around wherever you want, and place them with sample accuracy. ...but then I was forced into this route, needing a pc for work (and live, its realtime hardware all the way) andy butler