Thank you!
Riva
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On Tue, 14 Dec 2004, Jon Haworth wrote:
Second step is encoding (doesn't matter who does this, or where) - WAV files
are very large, so you need to compress it into MP3: this is equivalent to
saving a TIFF image as a JPG. This is the file you upload to the website.
I'll go completely against the gr
On Tue, 14 Dec 2004, Portman wrote:
The client is not the person giving the sermons. I
think he just recorded them. Should I have him send
them to me via e-mail or on a cassette or CD?
The easiest thing would be a wav on a CDR. Next best would be an Audio CD
that you can rip. I like EAC (Exact
Hi Jon,
The client is not the person giving the sermons. I
think he just recorded them. Should I have him send
them to me via e-mail or on a cassette or CD?
Riva
--- Jon Haworth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I think you'll probably need the client there when
> the recording is taken -
> who els
Jon Haworth wrote:
There's a program called "Sound Recorder" somewhere on the Start menu (or
Start > Run > sndrec32 if you can't find it). This is fine for your purposes
and will create a WAV audio file containing whatever comes in from the mic
input. If you like, you can clean up the audio with a
Hi Riva,
> Should I have my client record this or send
> it to me to record? (We are in different cities.)
I think you'll probably need the client there when the recording is taken -
who else will give the sermon? ;-)
There are two steps to this:
Firstly, recording - get your client to stand
Thanks Jon. Should I have my client record this or
send it to me to record? (We are in different
cities.)
Riva
--- Jon Haworth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi Riva,
> If it's only speech then I'd suggest a low bitrate
> MP3 - you may be able to
> get away with as little as 60kbps, which means
Thanks Tim. I haven't done sound before - any good
tutorials??
Riva
--- "Furry, Tim" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Tim responds:
> I know a lot of church sites do this with RealAudio,
> but personally I'd
> suggest using MP3 format...it's very cross-platform
> in support, and
> usually will play
Hi Riva,
> My client wants to put sermons on his website as a
> sound file and as text. What format should he put the
> sound file in?
If it's only speech then I'd suggest a low bitrate MP3 - you may be able to
get away with as little as 60kbps, which means a very small file.
> Any advice on
Riva asked:
My client wants to put sermons on his website as a sound file and as
text. What format should he put the sound file in? Any advice on how to
do this?
Tim responds:
I know a lot of church sites do this with RealAudio, but personally I'd
suggest using MP3 format...it's very cross-platfor
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