Quantcast

Forums | MacLife

You are not logged in.

#1 2009-06-24 5:20 pm

hasbeen
Member
Registered: 2004-09-23
Posts: 411

Sound Files Question

I have been transferring sound files from my old G4 Powerbook to my new MBP. Many of my old sound files are now labled Unix Executable File. Can anyone tell me why? Or, what app should I use (if any) to change them back to aiff, wav etc. THANKS!!


Meatwad Makin' Money See...

MacBook Pro 17" ∆ 2.93 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo ∆ 8GB 1067 MHz DDR3 ∆ APPLE SSD SM128

Offline

 

#2 2009-06-24 5:29 pm

nayrk
User Error
From: Outland
Registered: 2004-05-01
Posts: 769

Re: Sound Files Question

Where you using Logic or another program before?

Offline

 

#3 2009-06-24 5:51 pm

hasbeen
Member
Registered: 2004-09-23
Posts: 411

Re: Sound Files Question

No, not Logic. I have used Audacity though. I also have Line 6 and Roland Fantom  software on the machine.


Meatwad Makin' Money See...

MacBook Pro 17" ∆ 2.93 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo ∆ 8GB 1067 MHz DDR3 ∆ APPLE SSD SM128

Offline

 

#4 2009-06-24 8:06 pm

Metacell
misanthropist
From: The space between the spaces
Registered: 2005-03-19
Posts: 5852
Website

Re: Sound Files Question

Are they missing their extensions?  If so, adding the extensions should work.  Make sure "Show All Extensions" is checked in Finder->Preferences->Advanced.


Ho Eyo He Hum

Offline

 

#5 2009-06-24 10:54 pm

hasbeen
Member
Registered: 2004-09-23
Posts: 411

Re: Sound Files Question

Yes, the extensions are missing. Is there a way to discover the missing data? Thanks.


Meatwad Makin' Money See...

MacBook Pro 17" ∆ 2.93 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo ∆ 8GB 1067 MHz DDR3 ∆ APPLE SSD SM128

Offline

 

#6 2009-06-24 11:03 pm

hasbeen
Member
Registered: 2004-09-23
Posts: 411

Re: Sound Files Question

The info window says they are quicktime player app. documents, but I can't open them using Quicktime


Meatwad Makin' Money See...

MacBook Pro 17" ∆ 2.93 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo ∆ 8GB 1067 MHz DDR3 ∆ APPLE SSD SM128

Offline

 

#7 2009-06-24 11:10 pm

hasbeen
Member
Registered: 2004-09-23
Posts: 411

Re: Sound Files Question

I have made some progress. It seems the files may have been created in either Classic or another earlier Mac OS


Meatwad Makin' Money See...

MacBook Pro 17" ∆ 2.93 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo ∆ 8GB 1067 MHz DDR3 ∆ APPLE SSD SM128

Offline

 

#8 2009-06-25 9:26 am

Metacell
misanthropist
From: The space between the spaces
Registered: 2005-03-19
Posts: 5852
Website

Re: Sound Files Question

They were probably using Mac classic's OS method of document identification which involved a 4 letter code in the resource fork.  Although OS X now uses filename extensions, it still recognizes these, but if the resource fork got stripped in file transfer somehow, it will not recognize them.

The simplest solution is simply to add ".mp3" (if they are mp3s) to the end of the filename, or try other sound extensions like .wav, .aif, .ogg, but I don't know what else you could do if that doesn't work.


Ho Eyo He Hum

Offline

 

Board footer

Powered by PunBB 1.2.6
© Copyright 2002–2005 Rickard Andersson