Thanks for the various input!

Devin: Appreciate the link to your tutorial, and the tip to check out the LC dictionary. Why, oh, why does the RunRev 4 pdf manual not even /mention/ audio recording? Now I need to get the audio interface installed on my machine with LC, and see if I can get it to properly assign channels and record multiple clips. If it uses Quicktime, it may well work (on OSX...)

Stephen: I may have used the wrong word in "archive" -- we're not needing a true archive quality collection. We just have to reclaim some of our very pricey Tokyo real estate by getting decades of recordings off the shelves and onto hard drives (with backups of course.) I've worked in radio and TV production for 30 years and am aware of and able to deal with the hardware/tech issues, including checking levels, recording quality, etc. 'Metadata' will be simple folders and filenames to match what's already on the tape labels. No need to try to gather info on the contents of the audio. As cheap as disk space is (compared to real estate) I'm happy to go long and record 'dead air' -- just don't want the thing to record hours of silence if I get distracted by another task. Correcting filenames is such a fussy task in the Finder. Want to use LC to let me type in the titles of 8 tapes, record 8 mono tracks, save the files with the list of names I typed in, and, finally, hit the 'Stop Button' for me after a predetermined time. Next step is to test if LC can assign channels from the interface, and record 8 clips at once. I'll be the one using it, so it doesn't have to be pretty nor bullet-proof.

Bob: Appreciate your words of wisdom on consistent workflow -- I agree, that's essential. Fortunately, our needs are simple -- mono .aif's, filenames same as current tape labels. We're not on a SAN. I built a simple 16 drive Linux NAS, two RAIDs of 8 drives each -- one data, one backup (RAID 6). Used Linux' software RAID (mdadm). The beauty of that is zero vendor lock in. I can pop the 8 drives of the backup RAID out of the machine, take them off-site. Stick 'em in any other Linux box, no matter what SATA cards used, and the RAID pops right back up, ready to use. You hear too many horror stories of hardware RAID cards failing, can't get the same card any more, so all your data's toast! With gigabit ethernet on the NAS, and get an easy 70-80MBps throughput, and have gone over 100MBps when copying to the NAS from multiple machines. (I'm storing all our production video on these 32TB NAS boxes, too.

Lynn: Your website's info seemed a little sparse, don't get a good picture of what the software does. Downloaded and installed it, but trying to run the demo stack only results in errors. Can it record up to 8 audio tracks at once? If so, I'm willing to work a little more on getting it running....


On 2/25/11 12:57 AM, Tim Selander wrote:
I have hundreds, maybe thousands, of cassette tapes my company wants to
archive on hard disk. (OSX, Mac)

I bought a 16 input USB audio interface and 8 cassette decks. This way I
can record 8 tapes at a time to disk. Tested and working in a 'normal'
sound app -- Cubase.

But I have to baby-sit the machine in order to stop recording.

I'd like to program LC to automate the process a bit -- stop recording
after 60 minutes, name resulting files, move to appropriate folders, etc.

I'm sure I've read on the list about people using LC/Rev to record
audio, but can find no reference to it in the manual.

Can LC record audio under script control? Can it properly select the
Core Audio input to record from? Any pointers to documentation or sample
code snippets appreciated!

Tim Selander
Tokyo, Japan


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