Of course the ultimate tool would be one which would record your
Podcast, allow you to enter details and publish that on the Net by
uploading it to the appropriate Podcast server and so forth, The Mac
has such a tool in the form of the "Podcast Catcher" and I'm sure that
similar tools are around for the Windows PC.
On 19/10/2009, at 9:41 AM, Michael Hansen wrote:
Hi Andy,
Thanks for your reply. I currently use an Edirol R09 recorder with
2 Shure PG81 unidirectional mics, and I get good results with it. I
am hopefully getting a Sony PCMD50 later this year, so that should
be fun.
What I'm really interested in doing is importing recordings into a
file with my narrations inbetween the "tracks".
Thanks again,
Michael
----- Original Message ----- From: "Andy" <[email protected]
>
To: "PC Audio Discussion List" <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, October 18, 2009 3:30 PM
Subject: Re: Creating A Podcast: Use Sound Forge 7 or Gold Wave?
Hi Michael.
Personally I use Goldwave, but SF is perhaps the more professional
and flexible program.
I really don't think it matters too much which you use, unless you
intend to do some really fancy recording stuff.
If all you are talking about is recording the pure sound of trains,
then it's a matter of which recorder, rather than which Digital
Editor you choose.
Loads of us love the sounds of steam trains, passengers and day
trips by train. I have an Olympus DS50 and a pair of BSM Binaural
microphones and the sound quality is actually very good.
Okay, I need to convert my file, which is not MP3 into an MP3 file
using goldwave.
but apart from that, my Olympus and Goldwave does the job.
Finally, there is a lot to be said about keeping things as simple
and basic as you can. This, I believe, can be a sign of
professionalism. Clarity and simplicity, that's the answer.
Very best wishes.
Andy..
----- Original Message ----- From: "Michael Hansen"
<[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, October 18, 2009 8:46 PM
Subject: Creating A Podcast: Use Sound Forge 7 or Gold Wave?
Hi everyone,
My name is Michael and I am 17 years old. I'm totally blind, and
I make audio recordings of trains. I am interested in putting a
podcast together but I am not too sure how to do it or what
software programs to use. I currently have SoundForge 7.0 on my
computer, and it does everything I want it to. Well, just about
everything. However, I know that GoldWave is popular with people
who are blind, and I am wondering which program would be easier
for creating a podcast? I am thinking of putting several of my
recordings into this podcast, but I'm not sure how to put the
files together in eather program.
Thanks for any advice,
Michael
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