Sorry, but I don't agree.
According to me there are no
folks who need a little kick start on the basics of Cool Edit Pro.
The basics of Cool Edit Pro are called "Cool Edit 2000," and the most elementary basics of Cool Edit 2000 were already called "
Sound Recorder" in the early 1990s, so people who still need whole instruction videos to learn how to adjust the recording volume mixer and how to open a file simply shouldn't be using Cool Edit Pro.
I wouldn't stop anybody from trying to use Cool Edit Pro or Adobe Audition without any prior knowledge of digital audio editing on the PC, but I wouldn't make whole video tutorials for that category of wannabe Cool Edit Pro users either.
The point is that I just don't believe that people who don't even know how to open a file yet are capable of finding
the web site, downloading and installing the necessary
TSCC codec, and watching those AVI files that can't even be streamed from the web page.
That is why I simply say that there are no folks who need a little kick start on the basics of Cool Edit Pro, because even if such people exist, they probably won't find their way to those video tutorials anyway.
It's an interesting project, but I think that it would be more interesting for the people on this forum if the tutorials for Cool Edit Pro (and Adobe Audition) would start at a "Pro" level, instead of covering basic Windows skills like opening a file. But then again, I'm not so sure if serious Cool Edit Pro users really need whole instruction videos for things that could just as easily be explained in a few lines of written text with one or two images, so I would use that "video tutorial" concept for a funny "digital audio for dummies" tutorial.
Frankly I think that the main purpose of such "video tutorials" should not really be to teach anybody anything, but just to entertain a few people with some impresive images. Looking at instruction videos and following lectures is boring, so I would just try to make a funny demonstration or some kind of television commercial to show people all the wonderful things that are possible with Cool Edit Pro and Adobe Audition.
I would probably use some sound effects in that video too, because what I missed in those eight video tutorials were audio samples of the things that were being demonstrated, and I thought that that made the tutorials a little bit dry and theoretical.
For instance, it's nice to use the sound track for remarks like "notice now how the selected part of the waveform now has a zig-zag shape to the amplitude" — say what? — but it's a video of 800 x 600 pixels, so most people will see that zig-zag shape anyway. Instead of telling people to notice that shape, I would just play that selected piece of audio to demonstrate how that "zig-zag shape to the amplitude" sounds...
I could go further with this evaluation, but I just noticed that the video clips seem to have been removed from the site, so I don't know if that is still relevant...