When I am ripping a cd to mp3 and trying to read this screen, window-eyes is
very very slow, any suggestions? Running latest version on a win 7 64 with
16 gb of ram.
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Hi. I'm trying to record the contents of a cassette from an APH cassette
recorder to a Victor Stream. I have a wire connecting the APH's earphone
jack to the Stream's input jack. I tried using the APH's out line jack, but
the result is a little of the cassette's audio and a lot of static.
My que
Adrian, You will need an attenuating patch cord with a 3.5 or 1/8 inch male
plug on each end. the jack on the Victor Stream is a microphone jack not an
inline jack.
- Original Message -
From: "Adrian Spratt"
To: "'PC Audio Discussion List'"
Sent: Monday, August 06, 2012 2:12 PM
Subj
First, I would find out if the audio is available as an MP3 file already.
Second, is there a reason why you're not using a computer to do the
recording?
Christopher Wright
Work Phone: 914-297-7449[ [After thirty seconds, you can leave a voicemail.]
email: chri...@bestweb.net
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Hi Jim,
I'm afraid I can't offer a solution, but I've been using eac for the last
ten years or so under win 98, xp and now win 7 64 bit, and have also
experienced this same sluggishness with windoweyes whilst eac is ripping,
right throughout this time period.
After ripping has concluded speech re
Hello, so I got my default input settings mapped in Windows, as well as
the other sound card mapped for output settings, since I use Jaws, and the
speech from it is routed separately from the audio portion of the computer.
However, how do I tell Sound Forge about the third sound card? I'm goi