* Lisi <lisi.re...@gmail.com> [110105 21:42]: > I am after something from never-never land, but I live in hopes. > > I need a sound recorder, and would prefer that it be in Debian Lenny, but a > dual-boot would be possible. It must fulfil the following criteria: > > 1) Be managed by someone who knows a little bit about Linux, less about > Debian > and absolutely zilch about sound recording and balancing etc. > > 2) Ideally, usable by someone who knows even less about computers and sound > recording, but can use this package without too active a helping hand. > > Last time my husband needed to record a book, I Installed Jaunty on a > computer > that I had to dedicate to it, used gnome-sound-recorder and held his hand > constantly.
Do it the right way (which also is the easy way): => Mail-order a Lexicon (brand) Alpha (model) USB interface (about $75); this is a stereo interface, but it handles only one microphone-level input, and it does not provide phantom power (which is needed for condenser microphones). => Plug the USB cord into the computer. => Plug a microphone (balanced cable with 3-pin XLR plug; this is the standard for entertainment, broadcast, and recording industry) into the Alpha. => Adjust the microphone level with the "MIC" knob on the front panel of the Alpha. Simply adjust the level until the PEAK LEDs flash only occasionally. => Use "arecord". => After recording, use "aplay", which sends the sound out the headphone jack and the LINE OUT jacks of the Alpha. (In addition, the Alpha also has RCA jacks for computer speakers.) If you do not have a microphone with a 3-pin XLR connector, a decent dynamic microphone can be had for as little as $20 from the supplier from which you order the Alpha. Consider something such as the Shure PG48XLR microphone, which comes with a XLR cable for about $40, or a more expensive condenser lavalier microphone which clips onto your lapel, tie, or shirt. Check with a broadcast supplier such as www.bswusa.com or www.fullcompass.com, and tell the salesman what you are trying to do. This approach gives you uncompromised audio quality -- clean, full-fidelity, hum-free, and is better than using a PCI sound card or a sound card integrated into the motherboard. And the balanced microphone cable (which is the type of cable used with 3-pin XLR plugs) can be hundreds of feet long without fear of noise or hum, so you can change the recording location without having to move the computer. If you need phantom power (for a condenser microphone) or two microphone inputs, you need the larger Lexicon Omega (about $175). The Lexicon Alpha and Omega use USB 1.0 and thus work with Linux Etch, Lenny, and Squeeze; a two- or three-line configuration file may be needed to make the Lexicon the default sound device. With Ubuntu 10.10, both are fully plug-and-play. RLH -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20110105222553.ga3...@rlharris.org