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Sound Recorder
Does anyone here know of any good quality free sound recording software?
I've been playing with the generic one on my system and its ok....but 1 minute just isnt long enough for what i had in mind...and the resulting files are huge *LOL* (I know i could drop quality to get smaller file size...but i'm just not happy with the result :D ) So anyone got an idea? |
LOL....I have had my troubles with this too. I had it worked out on my old puter. I will see what is on there and PM ya.
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How about I call and you can just whisper it in my ear and I'll see if my "HARDWARE" matches your "SOFTWARE" requirements? ;) |
ROFL w/PF...
too funny... I would happily add you to my speed dial list.. |
LMAO.... ;)
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Thanx Lil....any help would be appreciated
I mean 1 min at the quality i find acceptable is around 7.32 meg...*LOL*...makes it somewhat restrictive to post or email |
Have you thought about converting it to mp3 once you recorded it? I believe there stuff out there that will do it from a sound recorder format
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I've just bought an MP3 player which records as MP3.
I'm trying to isolate the software. |
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And Sharni, if you're on about Sound Recorder not being able to record longer than a minute, there is a way of making it as long as you like. |
Yes i figured out a way for the generic one to record longer...but it still doesnt suit my needs
Explain your way of increasing the recording length please |
*BUMP*
Anyone else that can help? |
A simplistic approach might be to invest in one of the sound cards on the market; ie. one of the Blaster series by Creative. They offer a whole line of cards from the simple 2 channel stereo type up to the 4 channel 5.1 surround sound versions.
Each is priced pretty much in line with the features it offers. Not only do you get improved sound from your PC (with decent speakers, you will hear a difference), but the appropriate software to record, mix, edit, and playback also comes with the card. They all have the capability to record in the .MP3 and .WAV formats, and there are no restrictions on the length of time you can record. .WAV files, for example, consume a LOT of space, but if you choose, you can make one recording to entirely fill up your 300 GB hard drive. You can edit, cut, and copy sound bites from one clip to another, merge, invert, practically do any thing you want with a sound file after you have it recorded. The hardware is eays to install and, especially with the Creative line of cards, have very good instructions for doing so. Among other things I do on my PC, I write (editorials and articles) but my typing skills are on a par with the analogy about giving 1000 monkeys 1000 typewriters and eventually they'll write a novel so because of that, I use a voice recognition program and can actually talk to my computer. The Sound Blaster is one card recommended by the makers of the voice recognition software as being capable of correctly "hearing" what I say (the Blaster also has a microphone input). Hope this helps.... |
cdwav should suit your needs nicely. http://www.homepages.hetnet.nl/~mjmlooijmans/cdwave/
then you might want to use cdex to convert to mp3 for smaller files. hope this helps. -miles |
Thanx guys *hugz*
I will look into those options for sure! |
N-Track Studio is inexpensive, easy, and the demo is fully-functional.
Goldwave is another one that is well-respected. eMagic Logic Fun is free. It is a very basic but functional version of Logic Audio, the professional recording software from eMagic (owned by Apple Computer, but they have this free Windows version). |
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