Casey,

here is what I do:

1) I record with 'record' by Gerd Knorr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
It allows to record up to time interval or you can use spacebar to
start/stop recording. Each new recording is given a sequential 
number for you.

2) To edit I use 'spwave' by Hideki BANNO.
<http://www.itakura.nuee.nagoya-u.ac.jp/people/banno/spLibs/spwave/>

This sound editor lets you select individual pieces out of a long
recording and then save them to the sequential files. You can also
reload the last session you've been working on.

3) When you have final collection of WAV files, rearrange them by
adding playlist number to each individual name, i.e. 

   name-foo.wav name-bar.wav ...

should become

   01name-foo.wav 02name-bar.wav ...

4) Burning to CD is easy:

cdrecord speed=4 dev=0,1,0 -audio -pad -eject *.wav

adjust speed and dev accordingly (# cdrecord -scanbus)


I have written some instructions on a similar problem for my project, if
it of any help:

http://gwavmerger.sourceforge.net/gwm-manual/ar01s05.html
http://gwavmerger.sourceforge.net/gwm-manual/ar01s06.html
http://gwavmerger.sourceforge.net/gwm-manual/ar01s07.html


hope this helps,
Vlad

On Tue, 2004-02-24 at 06:08, Casey Heshler wrote:
> Ok, I guess the problem is in audacity...
> 
> As previously sent, I re-tried another record, within audacity, and came up 
> with the following "messages"
> 
> Pa_SetupDeviceFormat: warning - requested sample rate = 44100 Hz - closest = 
> 48000
> Pa_SetupDeviceFormat: warning - requested sample rate = 44100 Hz - closest = 
> 48000
> 
> It could have come from the record, or the playback after the record, or in 
> the "export to wav" - but, in any case, audacity IS doing something that is 
> "changing" the sample rate on me - even though the exported file shows a 
> sample rate of 44.1KHz, somewhere along the line, it had/is using 48KHz. I 
> have no options on this one.
> 
> Here is what I need, and maybe someone can "point" me to what I can get to do 
> it. Since audacity appears not to be the choice of usage here...
> 
> (1) I need to record "n" minutes, continously until I press "stop" - where "n" 
> is not known until I press "stop"
> 
> (2) I need to be able to "visually" see the audio, on some form of graph - 
> this is needed during the "editing" phase - I need to locate noise, silence, 
> and breaks in the recorded "file" to determine seperate speaches, and removal 
> of blank areas.
> 
> (3) I need to be able to work with the audio recording, multiple times. i.e. I 
> record a complete 90 minute tape (cassette) - played through my sound cards 
> LINE IN, in one pass, save it, open it later, remove dead air at beginning 
> and end, and break the "complete" recording down to seperate "files" - saving 
> these seperate files (audio).
> 
> (4) Burn these seperate audio "files" onto a CD Audio disc, in which the order 
> of the audio "tracks" must be viewable, and the final CD Audio disc MUST be 
> able to be played in ANY cd player - computer, boom-box, component stereo, 
> etc...
> 


-- 
_____________________________________________________________
Vladislav Grinchenko       http://home.comcast.net/~3rdshift/
                                 e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
                                                   
      Focus on quality, and productivity will follow.
_____________________________________________________________



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