No Urizred, you didn't get it. Ermghoti is speaking the truth. Here's the simple version- First, create a 4 beat or so click track using any metronome (I use the PXR4 Pandora, but if you like you can just plug in a mic and smack 2 drumsticks together 4 times.) Insert that into the beginning of track one. Now, use track copy to copy that click track to every other track in the song. Now, pan tracks 1 and 2 hard left and hard right. Turn off any EQ or FX. Now, connect the S/PDIF out to the S/PDIF in on a good soundcard, and record it to tracks 1 and 2 on any computer system you like, in real time. Make sure all other tracks are disabled. Then do the same thing with tracks 3&4, 5&6, and so on, until every track is in your laptop. Then, synch the click tracks manually, which will be much easier than trying to synch the actual audio tracks. Once the click tracks are all lined up, erase the click tracks. Now you have each individual track as a separate track in your software, and you can edit, use plugins, or whatever you like. I recorded an entire album on a VS1824CD, and that's how we transferred all the tracks to ProTools for mixing and mastering. No, you can't dump the audio data into a hard drive in *any* way- except one- Find a guy with a VS2480 or VS2000, load your backups into the sucker, and export them as WAV. files. God, was I ever pissed off when I figured out that there was no way to export digital data from a VS1824CD in any generally recognized format. That's why I'm in ProTools today. It took 14 hours to export the tracks for my album, and another 5 hours to synch them in ProTools. Today, I use the Roland mostly for a remote stereo recorder. Dumping *2* tracks into ProTools is easy. Good luck.-Richie