(no subject)
May. 4th, 2007 08:18 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Can someone please give me a clue as to how to transfer an audio tape to a digital medium? Specifically, I have taped an interview that I want to place in five time capsules -- most of these will be opened in the next decade or so, but one needs to last 43 years, so if you want to debate what media will still be readable then, now's your chance.
no subject
Date: 2007-05-05 01:47 am (UTC)Now, although much of my music is in the form of mp3s and CDs, I have a turntable & a cassette player. Though some of my video is in the form of DVDs, I have a VCR. The floppies and the laser disks are pretty much a dead loss though.
If you really want to convert it though, just get a simple Y-connector with RCA plugs on one end (you stick 'em onto the Tape Output jacks of your stereo) and a plug that fits into your mic jack on the other. If you want to improve the quality, you can get something like an iMic, which is an external audio card that plugs into a USB port. It has the same type of jack that you put the mic into, but it will sound much better. Just record in and make a .wav file. There's a variety of software that will let you edit or improve the sound of audio files. I use something called Magix Audio Cleaning Lab, which has functions that are optimized for analog sound (gets rid of tape hiss, or phono pops), but you'd probably be fine with freeware you can find on line.
no subject
Date: 2007-05-05 01:10 pm (UTC)