On Dec 28, 2011, at 13:16 , P. J. Alling wrote: > On 12/26/2011 3:59 PM, Joseph McAllister wrote: >> On Dec 26, 2011, at 06:34 , Cotty wrote: >> >>> On 25/12/11, John Sessoms, discombobulated, unleashed: >>> >>>> The school I went to we used an audio recorder to simultaneously record >>>> a quality audio track. The on camera audio was only used to synchronize >>>> the audio with the video when we edited. >>> This is an excellent idea. Two people with iPhones/whatever at left and >>> right halfway to the front, then the camera can roam at the front. Sync >>> up to a the drums at the start/whatever. Be interesting to see how far >>> the sync drifts over the course of a performance when viewed in a timeline. >> Stick with cassette recorders. They're a proven technology. :-)> > > Ok. > > http://dl.dropbox.com/u/1604247/PESO/PESO%20--cassetrecorder.html
Great Bag for your camera, MP-3 player and the like. Educates the young at the same time. Remember when this was the only way to save precious data you'd typed in to your computer, then used to load it again? Even a PDP-11 we used once had a paper tape reader to tell the computer it had a cassette drive, which in turn loaded the program that set up the 9" tape system to load the program you really wanted. That was after too many accidents with the 80 hole punch cards being dropped. If the PDP-11 was left on and did not crash, you didn't have to go through the drill again. The PDP-11 was used to talk to and provide feedback to three IBM-360 units so they wouldn't get out of synch with what we were doing at our end, if ya know what I mean. :-) Joseph McAllister [email protected] “ Nature is considerably more creative and inventive than humankind. Without Nature there isn't any humankind. Without humankind, Nature is fine.” -- PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List [email protected] http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow the directions.

