Jan Coffey asked:
Reggie, What are you using for recording?

That depends. If I'm using my own equipment, I typically record to a DAT machine at 44.1kHz and then run the signal in digital into my hard drive and use ProTools, CSound, and various freeware and shareware tools to capture and manipulate the sound files. ProTools Free works surprisingly well. (All of this, by the way, is on a Hewlett Packard Pavilion PC running Windows ME.) I've also used some sound recording software written by a couple of programmer friends (pretty primitive stuff).

When I get to use borrowed equipment, it depends on who let me
borrow what, but I've played with variable resolution DACs (one with
nice tube-amp pre-amps), various versions of ProTools hardware and
software both on PC and Mac, PC and Mac versions of SampleCell,
MOTU Digital Performer, I think I've used a version of Cakewalk with
digital audio recording... I've probably used quite a few others over
the years, depending on whose system I was using and what I
planned to do with the sound once I had it on the hard drive.
Oh, and I also have an old Korg DSS-1 (Digital Sampling Synthesizer)
that has some sampling ability, although not with hoards of memory.

For quick and dirty cd ripping and burning I've used Easy CD Creator
and for quick copies from a cd to the harddrive I've used Windows
Media Player.

Reggie Bautista

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