On Tue, Jan 30, 2007 at 03:26:41PM -0500, KS wrote:
> Andrew Sackville-West wrote:
> >
> > many mixing boards have two outputs: 1 for the mains and 1 for the
> > monitors. The levels can generally be controlled seperately for these
> > two channels. If you have that capability, I would recommend y
Andrew Sackville-West wrote:
>
> many mixing boards have two outputs: 1 for the mains and 1 for the
> monitors. The levels can generally be controlled seperately for these
> two channels. If you have that capability, I would recommend you use
> the monitor output for recording as you can then cont
On Mon, Jan 29, 2007 at 10:50:31PM -0500, KS wrote:
> Raffaele Morelli wrote:
> >
> >
> > The following are the questions which come to mind for the hardware:
> > 1. What kind of processing power do we need? Would a 2.0GHz PIV based
> > machine be OK?
> >
> >
> > If you don't intend
Raffaele Morelli wrote:
>
>
> The following are the questions which come to mind for the hardware:
> 1. What kind of processing power do we need? Would a 2.0GHz PIV based
> machine be OK?
>
>
> If you don't intend to mix the tracks and apply heavy effects to them
> (compression, eq,
The following are the questions which come to mind for the hardware:
1. What kind of processing power do we need? Would a 2.0GHz PIV based
machine be OK?
If you don't intend to mix the tracks and apply heavy effects to them
(compression, eq, etc etc..) 2.0Ghz it's enough, actually I am able to
On Sun, Jan 28, 2007 at 01:38:03PM -0500, KS wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> We are planning to have a setup so that we can record the upcoming talks
> (happening every weekend for several weekends at a stretch). The
> equipment which is already there comprises of 4 microphones, a mixer
> (with 12 inputs I t
On Sun, Jan 28, 2007 at 01:38:03PM -0500, KS wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> We are planning to have a setup so that we can record the upcoming talks
> (happening every weekend for several weekends at a stretch). The
> equipment which is already there comprises of 4 microphones, a mixer
> (with 12 inputs I t
Hi all,
We are planning to have a setup so that we can record the upcoming talks
(happening every weekend for several weekends at a stretch). The
equipment which is already there comprises of 4 microphones, a mixer
(with 12 inputs I think) and an amplifier for the speakers.
The following are the
in the pc I am using i have two sound-cards, I would like to know how can
I tell _snd_ which input device (sound-card) it should use.
Thanks :-)
--
LinuxUser aka Josef Oswald [EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
registered-linux-user # 134.818 at http://counter.li.org
The box said Windows, NT or better, so
At Wed, 22 Oct 2003 00:42:07 +0200,
Joachim Fahnenmueller wrote:
>
> On Sun, Oct 19, 2003 at 06:10:25AM +0800, csj wrote:
> > cdrecord -dao speed=8 dev=0,0,0 *.wav
> >
>
> Can someone tell me what this -dao option does? I have never used it,
> and IIRC older versions of cdrecord didn't have it.
On Sun, Oct 19, 2003 at 06:10:25AM +0800, csj wrote:
> At Sat, 18 Oct 2003 13:01:08 -0400,
> stan wrote:
> >
> > I'm using gramofile to record tracks from an LP and split them
> > into indivudal .wav fies. I've done this a lot in the past, and
> > have always been able to go to the individual tarc
At Sat, 18 Oct 2003 13:01:08 -0400,
stan wrote:
>
> I'm using gramofile to record tracks from an LP and split them
> into indivudal .wav fies. I've done this a lot in the past, and
> have always been able to go to the individual tarcks on my CD
> player. But,as I said, I've lost my notes on how to
I've lost my notes on how to use cdrecord to make an audio CD with tracks that will
work
corectly.
I'm using gramofile to record tracks from an LP and split them into indivudal .wav
fies. I've
done this a lot in the past, and have always been able to go to the individual tarcks
on my CD
player.
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
On Sun, 14 Nov 1999, Alisdair McDiarmid wrote:
> On Sat, Nov 13, 1999 at 04:11:05PM -0800, Aaron Van Couwenberghe wrote:
> >
> > Is there any way to *record* the audio that's playing to /dev/dsp? You'd
> > think it'd be as simple as cat /dev/dsp > myaudio, but
On Sat, Nov 13, 1999 at 04:11:05PM -0800, Aaron Van Couwenberghe wrote:
>
> Is there any way to *record* the audio that's playing to /dev/dsp? You'd
> think it'd be as simple as cat /dev/dsp > myaudio, but no. Is there a
> program that will allow you to do this?
I think the package you're looking
On Sat, Nov 13, 1999 at 04:11:05PM -0800, Aaron Van Couwenberghe wrote:
> Hi all -
>
> Is there any way to *record* the audio that's playing to /dev/dsp? You'd
> think it'd be as simple as cat /dev/dsp > myaudio, but no. Is there a
> program that will allow you to do this?
>
> Thx in advance.
>
Hi all -
Is there any way to *record* the audio that's playing to /dev/dsp? You'd
think it'd be as simple as cat /dev/dsp > myaudio, but no. Is there a
program that will allow you to do this?
Thx in advance.
--
..Aaron Van Couwenberghe... [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Berlin:
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