short answer to this story: Stay the hell away from any audio software made or distributed by NCH. ![]() These literally crap ALL OVER your Registry and must be deleted one by one to restore the integrity of your audio and MIDI stacks! I have had to repair some 5 or 6 PCs from this issue it takes time, costs repair money and is no fun for anyone, IT or no. If this were not enough serious trouble, NCH software, even these tiny editor programmes, leave dozens and dozens of Registry entries after uninstall. This means your DAW and PC will mysteriously crash every time you get fully working on an involved project. You should experience BSOD every time your PC memory goes to roughly 500MB, because these leftover bits totally destroy the normal operation of your audio and MIDI in your PC. Your MIDI will probably no longer work, either. Certain makes and editions of the NCH software (WavePad being one of them last I checked in 2014), completely CORRUPT your Registry by leaving behind these interupting, no-longer-working shim bits in your audio stack that will be essentially impossible for the average non-IT person to find. The problem is when you finally decide to uninstall and move on to, let's say, actual professional software, such as Reaper or any editor. Now, basically, this would not be considered a 'big deal' for audio software, but the install is NOT where the problem can be noticed. dll or two of their own in either or both your System32 and SysWoW. What happens is that during installs the NCH software taps into you PC's audio stack by placing a 'shim' into the stack and installing a. They have offices in at least Australia and the States, and some of thei audio software is the most absolutely DANGEROUS to your PC and its audio stack that has ever been released. I want to caution that WavePad editor and a few other products are offered in both free and paid editions by software company called NCH. Wow! Just browsing the forum a bit and happened by to see this post quoted above here. If that works, I can run it on the entire file. If you can supply a short sample with both some whoop whoop by itself and whoop whoop combined with your voice, I'll give it a try. It will let me take a section of noise, sample the noise, then remove it. It's pretty good for removing furnace/air conditioning fan noise and/or 60 Hz buzz. I use an editor software called WavePad, and it has a noise removal thingy built in.
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