Sounds good.  Not to start a war here but TR also allows you to record in 
the back GROUND WITHOUT INTERFERING WITH SCREEN READERS...Keith

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Chris Skarstad" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "PC audio discussion list. " <pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Saturday, August 04, 2007 1:51 PM
Subject: Re: scheduled recording from the internet


Hello Bryan

You absolutely can not go wrong with Replay A/V from

http://www.replayav.com

The wonderful thing about it is that it can record a program, and it
captures the stream without taking over your sound card.  So it
records in the background, and you can continue to surf the net or
use your screenreader, without having to worry that your screenreader
will interrupt the recording.  The other wonderful thing about Replay
A/V is a tool it has called the URL finder.  If you want to record
something, but don't know the address, all  you need to do is to
start the URL finder, play the audio you want to record for a minute
or so, and if things go right, the URL finder will get the address,
and you can then schedule it as a new show and record it right then
if it's an archive, or if it's a live show at a scheduled time,
Replay A/V will record it for you.  The program requires no scripts
or set files for its use, however if you use Window-eyes, you may
experience a bit of difficulty with the guide you can use to find and
schedule shows.
It will record mp3, real audio and Windows media streams, and the
included replay converter will allow you to convert any recording to
any other format you choose.  So if your stream is a windows Media
one and you want to save it as an mp3, Replay A/V will capture the
stream for you, and then afterwords, convert it to mp3 so you can
listen to it whenever it's convenient for you.  To me this is a much
better sollution because no extra sound card drivers can get in the
way, and that's the case, it's much easier and less intrusive. I hope
this helps.


At 01:06 PM 8/4/2007, you wrote:
>Hi
>
>I want to record a few audio programs from a web site at scheduled times.
>Is total recorder still a good option for doing this please or are people
>finding that other tools are more accessible or easier to use.  I have not
>used total recorder before but I see there are various presentations about
>it around on the internet but just wondered if anything surpasses that.
>
>Thank you.
>
>Brian Hartgen
>
>
>
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