Found 2 records for the .DEWF file extension name
There are 1 other file type using the DEWF file extension:
.dewf - General sound
.flac - Audio files encoded by Flac - free lossless audio codec
.cda - CD Audio track
.wv - WavPack lossless compressed audio file
.amr - Adaptive Multi-Rate compressed audio
.gp3 - Guitar Pro 3 project
.dvf - Sony DV voice file
.mus - Music file format
.aa - Audible Audio file - downloadable audio books
file extension DEWF - SoundCap, SoundEdit recorded instrument
File extension DEWF description:
8-bit sound, instrument.
Associated applications to file extension DEWF:
Company / developer:
FMJ-Software
Awave Studio is a multi-purpose audio tool that reads a veritable host of audio carrying file formats from different platforms, synthesizers, trackers, mobile phones... you name it! It can be used in a variety of ways: as an audio file format converter, as an audio editor, an audio and MIDI player, and, last but not least, as a wavetable synthesizer instrument editor and format converter. Think of it as the swiss army knife for anyone working in digital audio or with synthesizers!
Do conversions from the about 260 audio related file formats that it can read (no kidding - you read that right - approximately two hundred and sixty!) into any of the 125 or so audio file formats that it can write! No other software even comes close to such a wide format support!
Company / developer:
Adobe Systems Incorporated
SoundEdit was the first popular GUI-based audio editor for digitized audio. It was not only one of the first important audio applications for Macintosh, but one of the first significant audio applications for personal computers in general.
SoundEdit was one of three audio applications created during a sabbatical by Steve Capps during 1986. The Macintosh had no built-in sound input, so SoundEdit first shipped in January of 1988, as part of a hardware product called MacRecorder Sound System, by a company called Farallon Computing (which eventually became Netopia).
One of the major drivers for SoundEdit was Apple's HyperCard. With MacRecorder Sound System, stack makers could finally create alternatives to HyperCard's two built-in sounds.
SoundEdit was later bought by Macromedia (now Adobe Systems). Macromedia discontinued sales of SoundEdit as of 1 December 2004, continuing its official support through 1 June 2005 and still offering some downloads for this application to this date.



