Hi,

Yes, it's a little awkward, because you also generate crash logs of
time, along with an AIFF file that you probably want to convert to
mp3.  I bet there's also a maximum time to these snips --- like the
record function in iMovie, which may be less than 2 minutes, or
30 seconds, or something like that.

<pasting in from my post of a few messages ago>
In fact, control-option-shift-z will write the last spoken phrase and 
a crash log to a file on your desktop for trouble-shooting, though I've 
only tried this out of curiosity -- no point in keeping around spurious 
AIFF sound files and crash logs <smile>. 

Cheers,

Esther

On Saturday, September 15, 2007, at 07:18AM, "william lomas" wrote:
>hi
>
>oh wow so it is
>
>On 15 Sep 2007, at 18:16, louie wrote:
>
>> Greg,
>> The functionality you want is already in voice over. Check out VO+  
>> shift+ z.
>>
>> ,
>> ,
>> On Sep 15, 2007, at 10:05 AM, Greg Kearney wrote:
>>
>>> Here is an Idea and I'm wondering if any one knows of how we can  
>>> do this. The sighted users will routinely take screen shots when  
>>> trying to explain something. Some of you have done this for me  
>>> when reporting errors in my programs. I'm thinking we should be  
>>> able to do the same with audio. We could record the VoiceOver  
>>> audio to an MP3 file and then use that file to explain how to do  
>>> something in VoiceOver. Audio screen shots as it were.
>>>
>>> So here is my question. Is there a utility out there that will let  
>>> us capture the sound of VoiceOVer as it is being played? I looked  
>>> at Audio Hijack but can not figure out how to capture the system  
>>> wide audio of VoiceOVer as opposed  to audio from a single  
>>> application.
>>>
>>> Greg
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
>

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