Introduction on Ardour tutorialhttps://prokoudine.github.io/ardour-tutorial/en/introduction/Recent content in Introduction on Ardour tutorialHugo -- gohugo.ioen-usConventionshttps://prokoudine.github.io/ardour-tutorial/en/introduction/conventions/Mon, 01 Jan 0001 00:00:00 +0000https://prokoudine.github.io/ardour-tutorial/en/introduction/conventions/Below are some basic conventions we have adopted in this manual. Mouse Clicks Ardour requires a two-button mouse to run (or the emulation of that on your system in some other way). A click is assumed to be a left button mouse click. A right-click refers to the right-hand button on the mouse. A Ctrl, Cmd or Apple key pressed with a mouse click is not the same and may in fact give a different result.What is digital audio?https://prokoudine.github.io/ardour-tutorial/en/introduction/what-is-digital-audio/Mon, 01 Jan 0001 00:00:00 +0000https://prokoudine.github.io/ardour-tutorial/en/introduction/what-is-digital-audio/Ardour is a digital audio workstation (DAW). Beforing using it to record and edit sound, it might be useful to review how digital audio works. Frequency and Gain Imagine a loudspeaker. To move the air in front of it and make sound, the membrane of the speaker must vibrate from its center position (at rest) backwards and forwards. The number of times the membrane vibrates each second determines the frequency (the note, or pitch) of the sound you hear.