I use Stereo mix and I use headphones with a microphone built in.
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Paul Erkens" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "PC audio discussion list. " <Pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Sunday, February 06, 2005 11:02 PM
Subject: Re: Recording Skype calls in Goldwave


> No matter what you want to record, in fact you can choose from a number of
> options.
>
> First, if you want to record audio coming from the internet, wether it be
> skype calls complete with ringing and hangup signals or just a radio
> shoutcast stream, then it is always possible to connect your cassette
> recorder to your soundcard and start recording. However, this method
> requires that you shut off any windows sounds and the speech coming from
> your access software. Everything coming from your soundcard goes on tape.
>
> Another option is to use the "what u hear" setting in your soundcard and
> record off it. To make this work, you can go into your windows sound
setting
> (start -> programs -> accessories -> entertainment -> volume control) and
> tweak your sound card as follows.
>
> What is often unknown is, that the windows volume control applet really
> consists of two distinct parts: one fader set for playback and another,
> different fader set for recording. The playback panel shows up when you
> first open volume control. There you have the slider for the master volume
> all the way to the left, followed by all other sliders that are configured
> to show up from there, over to the right. In this playback panel, every
> slider has its own checkbox beneath it called "mute" that, when enabled,
> will shut off any sound coming from that audio source.
>
> A few things are noteworthy here. First: if you see a slider for your
> microphone in the playback panel, the checkbox below it labeled "mute"
> should be checked, on. If it is off, then you'll hear the sound that goes
> into your microphone directly come out of your speakers again. I don't
know
> the English term for the effect this may cause, but it may result in very
> loud and uncomfortable noises. While all other sliders in the playback
panel
> should be unmuted, your microphone should be muted in the playback panel.
>
> Second: if you wonder what source actually produces the speech coming from
> your Jaws' synthesizer, it is the "wave" slider. If you turn that down by
> tabbing to it and continuously pressing down arrow, it will gradually fade
> softer. The wave source also produces all sounds that come from windows,
for
> example when it starts up, and it is also the source of winamp,
realplayer,
> windows media player etc. Only audio cd's and midi files come out of a
> different source.
>
>
> The recording panel in windows volume control can be opened by entering
the
> pulldown menu at the top by pressing and releasing alt. This will open the
> leftmost menu from the pulldown bar. Whereas most programs have a file
menu
> at the very left of the pulldown menu bar, windows sound control calls
this
> menu "options". Just arrow down until you reach "properties" and press
enter
> to open the dialog.
>
> In this dialog, you can do two basic things. You can switch from playback
> panel to recording panel, and/or you can configure which faders (sliders)
> you want to have visible in each of the panels. This works as follows.
>
> When the dialog opens (after you press enter on properties on the
"options"
> menu), you are in a listbox that lets you select for which of your
> soundcards you want to configure the playback and/or recording panels.
Just
> arrow up and down to select your current device. If you have only a single
> soundcard installed, then this choice is already set correctly. press tab
to
> move on to the next item in the window.
>
> This is a set of radio buttons, that can be selected using up and down
> arrow. This group of radio buttons allows you to select which panel to
> configure: playback or recording. After making your selection, tab on once
> more.
>
> Now you are in a special kind of list box. While arrowing up and down, you
> may notice that each individual item can be toggled on or off by pressing
> space bar. This listbox shows all possible sliders that can be shown or
> hidden for each panel. For playback, select all audio sources to be turned
> on as far as you are using them. I mean: turning on an audio source you
are
> never using, only introduces hiss in your audio which is what you don't
> want. After selecting the faders you want to show up for the given panel,
> tab on and you'll land on the OK button.
>
> Now, the listbox I just mentioned contains the control that is mostly
called
> "what you hear", or "stereo mix". This is a special kind of audio source,
> only useful in the recording panel slider set. To understand how to use
it,
> think of this.
> Many audio sources can be played back simultaneously, but only one can
> normally be recorded from. Only if you use the "what you hear" audio
source
> as your recording source, you'll be recording the combined audio signals
> that are played back at any time by your soundcard. The what you hear
source
> is almost ideal for recording audio from the internet, but as mentioned
> above, it has the same final effect as recording on cassette tape, because
> everything coming from your soundcard is sent to your audio recording on
> disk.
>
> After pressing spacebar on the OK button, you'll see the requested panel,
> showing only those sliders that you turned on.
>
> In the recording panel, each slider does have its own checkbox beneath it,
> but it has rather a different meaning than in the playback panel. While
the
> checkbox below every slider mutes the source in the playback panel, the
> checkbox in the recording panel selects that audio source to be the source
> you are recording from. But there is some strange behaviour in this
dialog.
> If you turn one checkbox on, all others go unchecked automagically. This
is
> useful, because only one audio source can be recorded from at any time.
> However,
> I've often wondered why Microsoft didn't choose a set of radio buttons
> instead of checkboxes. But that's a detail which is not very important in
> this context.
>
> To use all this in daily life, you can go along like this. First, tidy up
> your playback panel by removing any faders that you'll never be using.
> Turning off one fader automatically removes its mute check box as well.
>
> Then tidy up your recording panel by only showing the slider you want to
> record from. Make sure that the checkbox beneath it is checked, so that
the
> source is really selected as the input when you start recording. If you
want
> to use the what you hear mixer recording input, that's fine.
>
> Next, ensure that the slider of your recording source is half way (50%)
up.
> Sliding it too high will make your recording clip, while a too low setting
> will result in a too soft sounding recording with a lot of acompanying
> noise.
>
> When you're done configuring the windows volume control, close it by
> pressing alt+f4. There is no OK button here that would normally let you
out
> of the current dialog, so you must use alt+f4 and you can be sure that
> windows remembers all your settings. This is only true for the volume
> control in windows. If you normally press alt+f4 from within a dialog,
> you'll simply close that window without saving your changes in it.
>
> Now, start your recording software and make sure it is recording.
>
> Next, start your internet source, i.e. skype, your shoutcast stream or
> whatever, and it will glide into your hard drive. After your source
> finishes, or if you close it because you've had enough, alt+tab back to
your
> recording software and stop the recording. Play or save your work as you
> like.
>
> But the third, and in my opinion the very best option to choose if you
want
> to record internet audio, is buy a cheap piece of software called "total
> recorder". It is an accessible bit of software, that lets you record
> anything from the web straight into a wav, or even directly into an mp3
> file. Total recorder has extremely good help under f1. Using total
recorder,
> it is easier than ever before to record from the web. Start total recorder
> and make it record and then start your internet audio source.
>
> A few features of total recorder that you will appreciate. If the internet
> source cannot feed its data into your computer fast enough, because you
have
> a slow or busy internet connection, then total recorder can eliminate all
> pauses and gaps in the audio. So while listening and recording you'll hear
> the gaps, but while playing back the recorded file you won't hear the gaps
> anymore because total recorder seemlesly stops recording immediately as
soon
> as it notices the stream is temporarily silent and it resumes without any
> ill effects as soon as the audio comes back again.
>
> Also, total recorder lets you record any source without having to shut off
> jaws or all your windows sounds, because it has a configuration option
that
> automatically fixes these things for you when you start recording.
>
> Another nice thing I've noticed is, that total recorder has a
pre-recording
> buffer for us to use. Imagine you want to start recording immediately as
> soon as the internet DJ opens his mouth. If you sit and wait until that
> happens, you'll be too late if you then press the record button because
> you'll miss out on the first few tenths of a second of his speech. The
> pre-recording buffer is a feature that constantly records half a minute in
> the background, and if you press record, it will prepend what it recorded
> before the point where you pressed the record button. So you don't have to
> worry about exact timings anymore. Just sit back and relax and as soon as
> you want to start recording, press record. Everything from this point on
> will be in your audio file, but also the 30 seconds that were before the
> moment you pressed record. Of course, you can configure the length of your
> pre-recording buffer.
>
> I don't get paid by total recorder or so, but I just think it is a
wonderful
> piece of software, very usable for the blind. It is about 12 dollars or
so,
> on www.highcriteria.com .
>
> If you have questions, just mail. If I can answer, I will.
>
> Kind regards from Holland,
> Paul.
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "Raul A. Gallegos" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <Pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
> Sent: Sunday, February 06, 2005 9:35 PM
> Subject: Re: Recording Skype calls in Goldwave
>
>
> > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
> > Hash: SHA1
> >
> > You can do it with one sound card provided you don't have software
> > speech running.  When you say they can hear jaws below this assumes you
> > are using jaws and it further assumes you are using software speech.
> > YOu can do it with one sound card provided your screen reader regardless
> > of which it is is using hardware speech.  Or if not, then two sound
> > cards are in order.
> >
> >
> > shawn klein said the following on Sun, Feb 06, 2005 at 12:26:40PM -0800:
> >> Um, guys, you need 2 sound cards to record skype
> >> calls. Unless all you want to do is record yourself
> >> talking. Whatever goldwave is set to record, whether
> >> it be the mike input, or stereo mix, is what skype
> >> will be picking up from your side and sending to the
> >> other party. If you try to record the people you're
> >> talking to with stereo mix or what you hear, all
> >> they'll hear is your Jaws, and their own voices
> >
> > - -- 
> > I always pass on good advice.  It is the only thing to do with it.
> > It is never any good to oneself.
> > -- Oscar Wilde, "An Ideal Husband"
> > - -- Raul A. Gallegos - http://www.asmodean.net
> > - -- Public GPG Key - http://asmodean.net/raul-pgp.asc
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> > VaBj5hy/JBcnUzRFmu6BwZ4=
> > =fuqB
> > -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
> >
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