I've been using an R50 for recording and archiving my voicemail at work
using just a pickup coil (5 bucks at your nearest electronics shop)
pros: cheap, works anywhere, fits in my md caring case along with
binural mic, cassette adaptor, spare batteries, remote, earbuds, etc.
cons: picks up bad hum on digital phones if you're not careful
just my .02
-Jeffrey
--
The day MS makes something that doesn't suck will be the day they start making vacuum
cleaners.
On Thu, 20 Jan 2000, Eric Woudenberg wrote:
>
> Rodrigo Drupi Mansilla =?iso-8859-1?Q?Jim=E9nez?= <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > BTW: Someone used your MD recorder to record phone calls? How was the
> > experience?
>
> I have. I use a "Quick Tap" from JK Audio (see
> http://www.jkaudio.com/telecomapp.htm) that taps into the handset line
> and provides line out to the recorder. Audio quality is quite
> good. The one problem I have when using my Sony portable for recording
> is that it inserts a track mark everytime the conversation pauses. You
> can easily end up with 50 tracks after a conversation. I think a Sharp
> might work better since you can turn off its synchro-start/track
> marking, but I haven't tried it.
>
> Rick
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