Hi David. How do you know when the file is *done* recording? If you
looked at my first impressions on it, you saw I had trouble
determining that.
Jane
On Mar 15, 2006, at 5:57 AM, David Poehlman wrote:
What I do with lips and doccuments.
1> open the document probably in text edit.
2> copy the document to the clip board.
3> if lips is open, paste the document into the edit window. if
not, open lips and then paste it in.
4> save / export the document givingg it a file name. it will save
as aif.
5> close lips
6> the the resultant audio file is on your desktop, open it and it
starts in quick time. It should play all the way through.
On Mar 14, 2006, at 11:30 PM, Ed Lopez wrote:
Hello people, Ed Lopez back here. I got the program Lipps that all
of you were talking about. I am wondering how you convert a text
file to a audio file with it? I am trying to convert a document
that I got, so I can listen to it later. I tried converting the
document, but it wouldn't play the hole document. I am new at
this, so I need to k'no how to get it to play back the file.
--
Jonnie Apple Seed
With his:
Hands-On Technolog(eye)s