Inside, he found a folder labeled "Dictionaries." And inside that: de.dat, es.dat, fr.dat, and en.dat.
Alex hadn’t slept well. The deadline for the podcast miniseries was 48 hours away, and his copy of Adobe Audition 1.5—the ancient, reliable workhorse he refused to upgrade—was now displaying a terrifying new problem. The menus were in German.
He opened the installation folder: C:\Program Files\Adobe\Audition 1.5.
He relaunched Audition 1.5.
He’d borrowed a colleague’s laptop to edit on a train ride home, and that laptop’s regional settings had apparently infected his portable installation. Now, back on his own machine, every command was a cryptic compound word. He couldn’t find the noise reduction filter. He couldn’t even locate the “Save As” button.
His heart raced. He renamed de.dat to de_backup.dat and then copied en.dat and renamed the copy to de.dat. A crude hack—tricking the program into thinking English was German.