2.Record
from microphone
Most
sound cards provide the ability to receive sound input from a microphone through
the sound card microphone port. This is useful for recording voice or sounds to
your computer.
1.
Check Your Hardware: If your microphone has never worked, or it stopped working,
first check the physical connection of the microphone. Verify that it is firmly
plugged into the microphone port instead of the headphone or speaker port. If
you are not sure which port is correct, you can check the sound card to see if
it is marked (sometimes with a picture of a microphone), you can use a process
of elimination, check the documentation that came with your hardware, or contact
the hardware manufacturer.
2.
Open All Editor, click "Setting" button to select or create a destination
sound file and its format(if you check on the fly).
3.
Click "Record Volumn control"
button to select the recording properties in the dialog box. Select the microphone
device, adjust the recording volume for the highest possible performance. You
might see other devices, such as CD-Player or Synthesizer (MIDI), in the recording
panel, uncheck all non-essential devices, this cuts down background noise.
4.
Click "Record" button, and then speak into the microphone. If the microphone
is plugged into the correct jack, the wave patterns on the display should move
up and down. If it does not move, sound is not making it through your microphone.
If the wave does move, press "Stop" button, and then press "Play"
button to listen to your recording. The recording is the destination sound file
you selected.
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3.Record
from videotape
You
can get the audio from videotape to mp3 , wma , ogg , vqf, wav files with All
Editor.
1. Connect
the left and right audio-out terminals on the VCR to the line-in or microphone
terminal on the sound card.
2.
Open All Editor, click "Setting" button to select or create a destination
sound file(Mp3 or Wav).
3.
Click "Record volume control" button
to select the recording properties in the dialog box. Select the line-in or microphone
device, adjust the recording volume for the highest possible performance. You
might see other devices, such as CD-Player or Synthesizer (MIDI), in the recording
panel, uncheck all non-essential devices, this cuts down background noise.
4.
Now start the playback of the VCR and click the "Record" button in All
Editor. You should see a wave pattern display of the audio as it is playing. If
the volume settings are too high, you see the wave patterns being clipped off
and appearing to fill the recording window. If the settings are too low, you see
only very small variations in the wave pattern. If the sound is being clipped
off because the volume is too high, move the line-in or microphone volume setting
down until most of the volume range is displayed without clipping. If the sound
is too low, increase the volume setting. Ok, here's the trick with the line-in
or microphone input. If the recording effect is satisfactory, then stop the recording
test by clicking "Stop" button.
5.
Depending on your sound card and the volume of the audio source, you might not
get enough volume using the line-in input. In this case try the microphone input,
as the volume sensitivity through the microphone input is generally greater than
with the line-in input.
6.
OK, let's rewind the tape and start the playback from the point you want to record.
Hit the "Record" button and stand by. When you want to stop recording,
just click "Stop" button, and the destination sound file is there.
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