I just tried gramophile and it's great. I did have a file lying
around that was the whole side of a cassette, and I just split
it into 5 songs. It only took a minute or so.

I've played with xwave and sweep for editing. I have hopes that
sweep will grow into a cooledit-capable program. They're making
a good start with it, but I can still crash it pretty easily.
It's worth a look.

Bob


On Thu, Jan 24, 2002 at 09:19:41AM +0000, Dougie Nisbet wrote:
> On Thursday 24 January 2002 3:07 am, Cheryl Homiak wrote:
> > On Wed, 23 Jan 2002, Jason Majors wrote:
> > > If you have a line in on your sound card, you can use it.
> >
> > Well, yes, I do have a line in and I do know how to use it, but I don't
> > know how to bring the audio into a file on my computer.
> 
> I'm glad you asked this question Cheryl. I haven't heard of 'gramofile' or 
> 'sound-recorder'. Normally I reboot to windows 98 and use CoolEdit - and 
> although I've experimented with 'audacity' - haven't found anything under 
> linux yet to come close to CoolEdit. CoolEdit isn't cheap, unfortunately, and 
> rebooting to windows is always a pain. 
> 
> I'm going through my cassette collection doing exactly what you want to do. 
> Reading in audio, cleaning it up, and storing it as mp3.
> 
> Dougie
> 
> 
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