RE: Changing sound source when recording in Goldwave

2014-05-11 Thread Samuel Wilkins
Hello Clive, press F11 and go to devices.  Tab until you get to recording
and you should find a list of options including microphone, line-in and
stereo mix or what you hear.  Select that and press OK.  Hope this helps.  

-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Clive
Lever
Sent: 10 May 2014 19:16
To: 'PC Audio Discussion List'
Subject: Changing sound source when recording in Goldwave

Hello all,

I have goldwave 5.58. My personal default setting has been to record only
from the line in to my PC, as I have been encoding loads of items from
cassette to MP3. How do I change the setting to record from the PC, so that
I can take the recording of an audio stream of a radio station on the
internet? Then, how do I change back again?

Thanks,
Clive



-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Tom
Kaufman
Sent: 10 May 2014 18:44
To: 'PC Audio Discussion List'
Subject: RE: Sound bars

Hello Mike and list:  That might be just the thing I would need as a lot of
my TV watching is back here in the room where I keep most of my
stuff...bud now and then (if I have my satellite dish in use to record
something for later viewing) that's when I'll fire up the Sony in the living
room; is then that I wish I had a little better sounding audio; not that
it's completely terrible!  But I wouldn't mind having it better if it's
practical!  Mike, what brand is your sound bar?
Tom Kaufman

-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Mike
Thomas
Sent: Saturday, May 10, 2014 9:28 AM
To: PC Audio Discussion List
Subject: Re: Sound bars

Hi Tom,  Most certainly, a sound bar will help a whole lot.I have a 40 
inch television and added a 37 inch sound bar.  They offer enough internal
enclosure to give it some of that rich depth the old set had.  Remember to
get as wide of a sound bar as your particular installation can allow for
great stereo separation.  Its a cheap alternative, and I only paid about $
65 for the sound bar.  It was very pleasing when it was set up and I've
never regretted the purchase.

Mike
- Original Message - 
From: Tom Kaufman tomca...@comcast.net
To: 'PC Audio Discussion List' pc-audio@pc-audio.org
Sent: Friday, May 09, 2014 8:47 PM
Subject: RE: Sound bars


 Hello Mike and list:  Although I've not heard or seen the Soundbar, I 
 would
 have to say that most anything is an improvement over what the television
 sets themselves supply you as far as audio is concerned!  It's a shame 
 that
 you can get a great big 41-inch set...and have that audio sound like not
 much better than a little portable set!  Of course I think I know that the
 idea is; the idea is that the manufactures of these sets want you to go 
 out
 and hook a stereo sound system (maybe Dolby (or whatever it's called) 
 would
 be simpler if they'd just go ahead and make the sets sound good; then 
 people
 wouldn't have to go and buy extra equipment!  I have my television back 
 here
 in the room where I stay a lot going through my stereo.  But the Sony
 41-inch set currently isn't hooked to anything; I don't really know that
 it'd be practical to buy a stereo system just for the TV out there...maybe
 one of those Soundbars would do some justice for it!
 Tom Kaufman

 -Original Message-
 From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Mike
 Thomas
 Sent: Friday, May 09, 2014 6:50 PM
 To: PC Audio Discussion List
 Subject: Re: Soundbars

 The soundbar sits there in the on position 24 hours a day.  I don't go to
 the trouble of turning it on and off.  It makes no noise, and only when 
 the
 television is turned on is an audio signal passed to the sound bar and
 amplified.   Those little speakers inside a flat panel television probably
 could be made to sound better, but without any depth for an enclosure, 
 they
 sound very tinny and cheap.  The sound bar, even cheap ones help quite a
 bit.  I'm not an audiophile by any means, but even I objected to the
 television sound quality.
 - Original Message - 
 From: Dane Trethowan grtd...@internode.on.net
 To: PC Audio Discussion List pc-audio@pc-audio.org
 Sent: Friday, May 09, 2014 6:39 PM
 Subject: Re: Soundbars


 I'm sure I'm miss-understanding something somewhere in your post, if the
 Television's turned off then how do you get the sound from it to the
 Soundbar or don't you bother, do you just use the Soundbar with your smart
 device.


 On 10 May 2014, at 8:36 am, Mike Thomas wheelt...@centurylink.net wrote:

 Hi,  I made the mistake you're making, and thought I could sit a sound 
 bar

 on top of a flat screen television.  Not quite so.  The one I purchased 
 is

 about the shape of a distorted closed cylinder.  Meaning it is the size 
 in

 length that you purchase, and perhaps somewhat oval with a flat bottom
 surface.  What happened with mine is it improved the television sound
 quality immensely, but the 

RE: Changing sound source when recording in Goldwave

2014-05-11 Thread Clive Lever
Thanks Samuel,

With Windows 7, there is no 'what You Hear option, so I'll just experiment
until I find the right one.

Thanks,
Clive


-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Samuel
Wilkins
Sent: 11 May 2014 08:17
To: 'PC Audio Discussion List'
Subject: RE: Changing sound source when recording in Goldwave

Hello Clive, press F11 and go to devices.  Tab until you get to recording
and you should find a list of options including microphone, line-in and
stereo mix or what you hear.  Select that and press OK.  Hope this helps.  

-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Clive
Lever
Sent: 10 May 2014 19:16
To: 'PC Audio Discussion List'
Subject: Changing sound source when recording in Goldwave

Hello all,

I have goldwave 5.58. My personal default setting has been to record only
from the line in to my PC, as I have been encoding loads of items from
cassette to MP3. How do I change the setting to record from the PC, so that
I can take the recording of an audio stream of a radio station on the
internet? Then, how do I change back again?

Thanks,
Clive



-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Tom
Kaufman
Sent: 10 May 2014 18:44
To: 'PC Audio Discussion List'
Subject: RE: Sound bars

Hello Mike and list:  That might be just the thing I would need as a lot of
my TV watching is back here in the room where I keep most of my
stuff...bud now and then (if I have my satellite dish in use to record
something for later viewing) that's when I'll fire up the Sony in the living
room; is then that I wish I had a little better sounding audio; not that
it's completely terrible!  But I wouldn't mind having it better if it's
practical!  Mike, what brand is your sound bar?
Tom Kaufman

-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Mike
Thomas
Sent: Saturday, May 10, 2014 9:28 AM
To: PC Audio Discussion List
Subject: Re: Sound bars

Hi Tom,  Most certainly, a sound bar will help a whole lot.I have a 40 
inch television and added a 37 inch sound bar.  They offer enough internal
enclosure to give it some of that rich depth the old set had.  Remember to
get as wide of a sound bar as your particular installation can allow for
great stereo separation.  Its a cheap alternative, and I only paid about $
65 for the sound bar.  It was very pleasing when it was set up and I've
never regretted the purchase.

Mike
- Original Message -
From: Tom Kaufman tomca...@comcast.net
To: 'PC Audio Discussion List' pc-audio@pc-audio.org
Sent: Friday, May 09, 2014 8:47 PM
Subject: RE: Sound bars


 Hello Mike and list:  Although I've not heard or seen the Soundbar, I 
 would
 have to say that most anything is an improvement over what the television
 sets themselves supply you as far as audio is concerned!  It's a shame 
 that
 you can get a great big 41-inch set...and have that audio sound like not
 much better than a little portable set!  Of course I think I know that the
 idea is; the idea is that the manufactures of these sets want you to go 
 out
 and hook a stereo sound system (maybe Dolby (or whatever it's called) 
 would
 be simpler if they'd just go ahead and make the sets sound good; then 
 people
 wouldn't have to go and buy extra equipment!  I have my television back 
 here
 in the room where I stay a lot going through my stereo.  But the Sony
 41-inch set currently isn't hooked to anything; I don't really know that
 it'd be practical to buy a stereo system just for the TV out there...maybe
 one of those Soundbars would do some justice for it!
 Tom Kaufman

 -Original Message-
 From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Mike
 Thomas
 Sent: Friday, May 09, 2014 6:50 PM
 To: PC Audio Discussion List
 Subject: Re: Soundbars

 The soundbar sits there in the on position 24 hours a day.  I don't go to
 the trouble of turning it on and off.  It makes no noise, and only when 
 the
 television is turned on is an audio signal passed to the sound bar and
 amplified.   Those little speakers inside a flat panel television probably
 could be made to sound better, but without any depth for an enclosure, 
 they
 sound very tinny and cheap.  The sound bar, even cheap ones help quite a
 bit.  I'm not an audiophile by any means, but even I objected to the
 television sound quality.
 - Original Message - 
 From: Dane Trethowan grtd...@internode.on.net
 To: PC Audio Discussion List pc-audio@pc-audio.org
 Sent: Friday, May 09, 2014 6:39 PM
 Subject: Re: Soundbars


 I'm sure I'm miss-understanding something somewhere in your post, if the
 Television's turned off then how do you get the sound from it to the
 Soundbar or don't you bother, do you just use the Soundbar with your smart
 device.


 On 10 May 2014, at 8:36 am, Mike Thomas wheelt...@centurylink.net wrote:

 Hi,  I made the mistake you're making

RE: Changing sound source when recording in Goldwave

2014-05-11 Thread Samuel Wilkins
Ah, you need to go into sound in the control panel, control tab to
recording, and in the list of devices, press the context menu key and check
the show disabled devices.  Hope this helps.  

-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Clive
Lever
Sent: 11 May 2014 13:58
To: 'PC Audio Discussion List'
Subject: RE: Changing sound source when recording in Goldwave

Thanks Samuel,

With Windows 7, there is no 'what You Hear option, so I'll just experiment
until I find the right one.

Thanks,
Clive


-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Samuel
Wilkins
Sent: 11 May 2014 08:17
To: 'PC Audio Discussion List'
Subject: RE: Changing sound source when recording in Goldwave

Hello Clive, press F11 and go to devices.  Tab until you get to recording
and you should find a list of options including microphone, line-in and
stereo mix or what you hear.  Select that and press OK.  Hope this helps.  

-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Clive
Lever
Sent: 10 May 2014 19:16
To: 'PC Audio Discussion List'
Subject: Changing sound source when recording in Goldwave

Hello all,

I have goldwave 5.58. My personal default setting has been to record only
from the line in to my PC, as I have been encoding loads of items from
cassette to MP3. How do I change the setting to record from the PC, so that
I can take the recording of an audio stream of a radio station on the
internet? Then, how do I change back again?

Thanks,
Clive



-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Tom
Kaufman
Sent: 10 May 2014 18:44
To: 'PC Audio Discussion List'
Subject: RE: Sound bars

Hello Mike and list:  That might be just the thing I would need as a lot of
my TV watching is back here in the room where I keep most of my
stuff...bud now and then (if I have my satellite dish in use to record
something for later viewing) that's when I'll fire up the Sony in the living
room; is then that I wish I had a little better sounding audio; not that
it's completely terrible!  But I wouldn't mind having it better if it's
practical!  Mike, what brand is your sound bar?
Tom Kaufman

-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Mike
Thomas
Sent: Saturday, May 10, 2014 9:28 AM
To: PC Audio Discussion List
Subject: Re: Sound bars

Hi Tom,  Most certainly, a sound bar will help a whole lot.I have a 40 
inch television and added a 37 inch sound bar.  They offer enough internal
enclosure to give it some of that rich depth the old set had.  Remember to
get as wide of a sound bar as your particular installation can allow for
great stereo separation.  Its a cheap alternative, and I only paid about $
65 for the sound bar.  It was very pleasing when it was set up and I've
never regretted the purchase.

Mike
- Original Message -
From: Tom Kaufman tomca...@comcast.net
To: 'PC Audio Discussion List' pc-audio@pc-audio.org
Sent: Friday, May 09, 2014 8:47 PM
Subject: RE: Sound bars


 Hello Mike and list:  Although I've not heard or seen the Soundbar, I 
 would
 have to say that most anything is an improvement over what the television
 sets themselves supply you as far as audio is concerned!  It's a shame 
 that
 you can get a great big 41-inch set...and have that audio sound like not
 much better than a little portable set!  Of course I think I know that the
 idea is; the idea is that the manufactures of these sets want you to go 
 out
 and hook a stereo sound system (maybe Dolby (or whatever it's called) 
 would
 be simpler if they'd just go ahead and make the sets sound good; then 
 people
 wouldn't have to go and buy extra equipment!  I have my television back 
 here
 in the room where I stay a lot going through my stereo.  But the Sony
 41-inch set currently isn't hooked to anything; I don't really know that
 it'd be practical to buy a stereo system just for the TV out there...maybe
 one of those Soundbars would do some justice for it!
 Tom Kaufman

 -Original Message-
 From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Mike
 Thomas
 Sent: Friday, May 09, 2014 6:50 PM
 To: PC Audio Discussion List
 Subject: Re: Soundbars

 The soundbar sits there in the on position 24 hours a day.  I don't go to
 the trouble of turning it on and off.  It makes no noise, and only when 
 the
 television is turned on is an audio signal passed to the sound bar and
 amplified.   Those little speakers inside a flat panel television probably
 could be made to sound better, but without any depth for an enclosure, 
 they
 sound very tinny and cheap.  The sound bar, even cheap ones help quite a
 bit.  I'm not an audiophile by any means, but even I objected to the
 television sound quality.
 - Original Message - 
 From: Dane Trethowan grtd...@internode.on.net
 To: PC Audio Discussion List pc-audio@pc-audio.org

RE: Changing sound source when recording in Goldwave

2014-05-11 Thread Clive Lever
Thanks Samuel,

I've sorted it now. In Windows 7, as another respondent said, it's loop back
rather than 'what you hear'.

Best,
Clive



-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Samuel
Wilkins
Sent: 11 May 2014 20:46
To: 'PC Audio Discussion List'
Subject: RE: Changing sound source when recording in Goldwave

Ah, you need to go into sound in the control panel, control tab to
recording, and in the list of devices, press the context menu key and check
the show disabled devices.  Hope this helps.  

-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Clive
Lever
Sent: 11 May 2014 13:58
To: 'PC Audio Discussion List'
Subject: RE: Changing sound source when recording in Goldwave

Thanks Samuel,

With Windows 7, there is no 'what You Hear option, so I'll just experiment
until I find the right one.

Thanks,
Clive


-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Samuel
Wilkins
Sent: 11 May 2014 08:17
To: 'PC Audio Discussion List'
Subject: RE: Changing sound source when recording in Goldwave

Hello Clive, press F11 and go to devices.  Tab until you get to recording
and you should find a list of options including microphone, line-in and
stereo mix or what you hear.  Select that and press OK.  Hope this helps.  

-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Clive
Lever
Sent: 10 May 2014 19:16
To: 'PC Audio Discussion List'
Subject: Changing sound source when recording in Goldwave

Hello all,

I have goldwave 5.58. My personal default setting has been to record only
from the line in to my PC, as I have been encoding loads of items from
cassette to MP3. How do I change the setting to record from the PC, so that
I can take the recording of an audio stream of a radio station on the
internet? Then, how do I change back again?

Thanks,
Clive



-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Tom
Kaufman
Sent: 10 May 2014 18:44
To: 'PC Audio Discussion List'
Subject: RE: Sound bars

Hello Mike and list:  That might be just the thing I would need as a lot of
my TV watching is back here in the room where I keep most of my
stuff...bud now and then (if I have my satellite dish in use to record
something for later viewing) that's when I'll fire up the Sony in the living
room; is then that I wish I had a little better sounding audio; not that
it's completely terrible!  But I wouldn't mind having it better if it's
practical!  Mike, what brand is your sound bar?
Tom Kaufman

-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Mike
Thomas
Sent: Saturday, May 10, 2014 9:28 AM
To: PC Audio Discussion List
Subject: Re: Sound bars

Hi Tom,  Most certainly, a sound bar will help a whole lot.I have a 40 
inch television and added a 37 inch sound bar.  They offer enough internal
enclosure to give it some of that rich depth the old set had.  Remember to
get as wide of a sound bar as your particular installation can allow for
great stereo separation.  Its a cheap alternative, and I only paid about $
65 for the sound bar.  It was very pleasing when it was set up and I've
never regretted the purchase.

Mike
- Original Message -
From: Tom Kaufman tomca...@comcast.net
To: 'PC Audio Discussion List' pc-audio@pc-audio.org
Sent: Friday, May 09, 2014 8:47 PM
Subject: RE: Sound bars


 Hello Mike and list:  Although I've not heard or seen the Soundbar, I 
 would have to say that most anything is an improvement over what the 
 television sets themselves supply you as far as audio is concerned!  
 It's a shame that you can get a great big 41-inch set...and have that 
 audio sound like not much better than a little portable set!  Of 
 course I think I know that the idea is; the idea is that the 
 manufactures of these sets want you to go out and hook a stereo sound 
 system (maybe Dolby (or whatever it's called) would be simpler if 
 they'd just go ahead and make the sets sound good; then people 
 wouldn't have to go and buy extra equipment!  I have my television 
 back here in the room where I stay a lot going through my stereo.  But 
 the Sony 41-inch set currently isn't hooked to anything; I don't 
 really know that it'd be practical to buy a stereo system just for the 
 TV out there...maybe one of those Soundbars would do some justice for 
 it!
 Tom Kaufman

 -Original Message-
 From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of 
 Mike Thomas
 Sent: Friday, May 09, 2014 6:50 PM
 To: PC Audio Discussion List
 Subject: Re: Soundbars

 The soundbar sits there in the on position 24 hours a day.  I don't go 
 to the trouble of turning it on and off.  It makes no noise, and only 
 when the television is turned on is an audio signal passed to the 
 sound bar and
 amplified.   Those little speakers inside a flat panel television probably
 could