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About Working with Dolby E
About Working with Dolby E
Things to Consider When Working with Dolby E
Editing
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Audio
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About Working with Dolby E
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What You Can Do with Dolby E
When working with Dolby E encoded audio tracks in Flint you can do the following:
Play back Dolby E encoded audio from the timeline.
Scrub Dolby E encoded audio from the timeline at standard playback speed.
Create timelines with a mix of Dolby E encoded tracks and standard audio tracks.
Edit Dolby E encoded audio at the frame level.
Import Dolby E encoded audio as a file (such as AIFF 24-bits 48kHz or WAVE 24-bit 48kHz) without altering the Dolby E stream.
Export Dolby E encoded audio as a file (such as AIFF 24-bit 48kHz or WAVE 24-bit 48kHz) without altering the Dolby E stream.
Capture Dolby E encoded audio from a VTR while monitoring the decoded signal.
Output Dolby E encoded audio to a VTR while monitoring the decoded signal.