[studiorecorder] Re: file conversion

  • From: Curtis Delzer <curtis@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: studiorecorder@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Wed, 24 Jun 2015 11:45:01 -0700

go to your list of devices, hit right click from your system tray on
"speakers," if that is what shows, and focus your screen reader "mouse"
or "jaws" cursor on the list of devices. Right click again, and make
sure that the checkbox to "show all devices, even disconnected ones," is
checked.
that may start you sniffing in the right place.
-----
Curtis Delzer, HS.
K6VFO
San Bernardino, CA

On Mon, 22 Jun 2015 13:27:32 -0400
Harry Brown <wd8oep2464@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Hi Mary,
First, I want to thank you, and Jayson, for the help you both have given me!
I'd love to do it that way, however, I have another problem.
In Windows 7, I go to control pannel, then, I click on sounds, then, I go to
the recording tab. Then, I found the line in, so I can plug in my patch cord
between the tape recorder and the computer. However, there is no listen tab,
so, I cannot hear the recording from my tape recorder to the computer. Do
you, or anyone have an idea how to get this to happen? I need to record a
bunch of things off of tapes on to my computer. I've got so much stuff to
digitize, are any of you there, with things you have to digitize that you
don't want to lose?
Harry

On 6/20/2015 5:15 PM, Mary Emerson wrote:
The only other Idea I have is to hook up your PC's headphone jack to a >
digital recorder's audio input jack, and copy the file into that >
recorder; make sure the new file's sound is acceptable and not too > loud
or too soft; save it to the digital recorder in MP3 at a higher > bit and
sample rate. Then insert that file into Studio Recorder and > edit it. The
problem may be that the original file doesn't provide > enough for Studio
Recorder to work with.

if this doesn't work, let's hope Rob or Larry can provide ideas next >
week; or maybe somebody else at APH will think of something.

Mary




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