Re: Problem playing Wav Files.

2005-02-18 Thread Alan Pollard
Gary,yes, 1 wav in a different folder with only a Volume value of well
maybe  3 % including some Wav's on a Floppy,and no sound at all from the
remaining Files  in  the Sub Folders   of the, My Music  Folder . thanks
for your   help.Alan Pollard.At 05:01 AM 2/15/05 -0500, you wrote:

Are you saying that 1 file plays, but no others?

- Original Message - 
From: Alan Pollard [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Pc-audio@pc-audio.org
Sent: Tuesday, February 15, 2005 4:20 AM
Subject: Problem playing Wav Files.


 Hi List Members,  Iam running Win 98 first Edition,with Win Media Player
 ,6.4.  I have been Playing Wav Files directley off my H Drive quite o
 k,that is until Today! .now,absolutely no Sound well, not quite true,1 wav
 File Volume rating of about5%,same with a Floppy Disk  containing Wav
 files,adjusting the Volume Control makes no difference.however  their is
 no problem Playing a  Commercial C D in the drive. .I am useing CD.ex for
 ripping.Any help will be very much appreciated.Thanking you.Alan


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Ray DVS DVD

2005-02-18 Thread Cynthia Handel
I haven't been able to figure out how to make the DVS portion of the Ray DVD 
to play on my computer.  I'm trying to use Power DVD to play it.  Although I 
go into the Audio Language sub menu and can see four choices:  English 1, 
French, English 2 (Director's notes), and English 3 Audio for the Visually 
Impaired; the only one which is checked is English 1, and they all say 
(Unavailable) after the selection.

Does anyone know anything about Power DVD to explain how I should be able to 
change the selection to English 3, Audio for the Visually Impaired? 
Pressing space or enter on the selection does nothing to select it.

Is there a web page for Power DVD where I might be able to find answers or 
contact the company?  Finally, is there something on the DVD, itself, which 
might need to be selected in order to play the DVS version?

Thanks in advance for any assistance.

The Frustrated...
Cindy


Determine that the thing can and shall be done, and then...find the way.
Abraham Lincoln 


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Re: Ray DVS DVD

2005-02-18 Thread Rob
Is the DVD a legal copy?
if not, this may be your problem.
- Original Message - 
From: Cynthia Handel [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: pc-audio pc-audio@pc-audio.org
Sent: Friday, February 18, 2005 7:26 AM
Subject: Ray DVS DVD


I haven't been able to figure out how to make the DVS portion of the Ray DVD 
to play on my computer.  I'm trying to use Power DVD to play it.  Although I 
go into the Audio Language sub menu and can see four choices:  English 1, 
French, English 2 (Director's notes), and English 3 Audio for the Visually 
Impaired; the only one which is checked is English 1, and they all say 
(Unavailable) after the selection.

Does anyone know anything about Power DVD to explain how I should be able to 
change the selection to English 3, Audio for the Visually Impaired? 
Pressing space or enter on the selection does nothing to select it.

Is there a web page for Power DVD where I might be able to find answers or 
contact the company?  Finally, is there something on the DVD, itself, which 
might need to be selected in order to play the DVS version?

Thanks in advance for any assistance.
The Frustrated...
Cindy
Determine that the thing can and shall be done, and then...find the way.
Abraham Lincoln 

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Re: Ray DVS DVD

2005-02-18 Thread Cynthia Handel
Yes it is a legal copy.  I bought it from Amazon.com, from the link provided 
by Mary Watkins of DVS.  The case says that it's the DVS version.

Cindy
- Original Message - 
From: Rob [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: PC audio discussion list.  Pc-audio@pc-audio.org
Sent: Friday, February 18, 2005 1:48 PM
Subject: Re: Ray DVS DVD


Is the DVD a legal copy?
if not, this may be your problem.

- Original Message - 
From: Cynthia Handel [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: pc-audio pc-audio@pc-audio.org
Sent: Friday, February 18, 2005 7:26 AM
Subject: Ray DVS DVD


I haven't been able to figure out how to make the DVS portion of the Ray 
DVD
 to play on my computer.  I'm trying to use Power DVD to play it.  Although 
 I
 go into the Audio Language sub menu and can see four choices:  English 1,
 French, English 2 (Director's notes), and English 3 Audio for the Visually
 Impaired; the only one which is checked is English 1, and they all say
 (Unavailable) after the selection.

 Does anyone know anything about Power DVD to explain how I should be able 
 to
 change the selection to English 3, Audio for the Visually Impaired?
 Pressing space or enter on the selection does nothing to select it.

 Is there a web page for Power DVD where I might be able to find answers or
 contact the company?  Finally, is there something on the DVD, itself, 
 which
 might need to be selected in order to play the DVS version?

 Thanks in advance for any assistance.

 The Frustrated...
 Cindy


 Determine that the thing can and shall be done, and then...find the way.
 Abraham Lincoln


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Re: microphone settings for Skype

2005-02-18 Thread chris ramsay
sarah what is your skype contact name? chris ramsay
- Original Message - 
From: Sarai D. Bucciarelli [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: pc-audio pc-audio@pc-audio.org; Skype English 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]; TSE-chat [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: blind tech [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, February 14, 2005 9:48 PM
Subject: microphone settings for Skype


 Hi:
 I can hear people when they call or when I call, but people can't hear me.
 What do I do? Also, how do I get rid of the message that says call 
 duration
 unavailable five million times!
 Sarai D. Bucciarelli



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Re: ARTICLE: SURROUNDING YOURSELF IWTH SOUND

2005-02-18 Thread Dane Trethowan
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Right!
Well, the Pioneer sub-woofer I have has plenty of control to control the base
level and the bass frequency so be prepared to spend a bit of money for a good
sub-woofer unit.  Let me know how you get on, sounds if you know what you're
doing.
At 21:56 16/02/2005 -0700, Doc wrote:
hey Dane congradulations for getting it set up.  I'm in the market for a
second subwoofer to balance out my room.  Unlike many I like really deep
bass rather than loud bass.
Robert Doc Wright
http://www.wrightplaceinc.net
Very funny Scotty ... now beam down my clothes !
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Power DVD Question

2005-02-18 Thread Cynthia Handel
I was playing around with the Ray DVD and my Power DVD on my computer.
While I was not able to change the selection to Audio for the Visually
Impaired in the audio language sub menu, I was clicking around with my JAWS
mouse button and suddenly heard the DVS description.  The problem is that I
don't know what I clicked...it was just graphics.

Are there JAWS scripts for Power DVD?  Or, is there a more user friendly
program?

Cindy


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Computer, microphone, iPod make broadcasting personal

2005-02-18 Thread Kelly Pierce
I just ran across this article about the latest computer audio trend: 
podcasting.  One of the celebrities of the podcasting world is former MTV 
veejay Adam Curry whose audio postings can be found at curry.com

Kelly

The Boston Globe
December 20, 2004

   Computer, microphone, iPod make broadcasting personal
   By Peter J. Howe,
Globe Staff
   Richie Carey has heard the future of radio. It's on an iPod music
player.
   Carey, a 38-year-old website developer and marketing consultant from
Sandwich, is among an early wave of fans for a new broadcast medium dubbed
''podcasting -- audio content that listeners download from websites to
iPods or similar digital music player devices.
   ''I can subscribe to custom-made audio that is whatever I want to
hear, and that's powerful stuff in my mind, Carey said. ''I'm really in
love with the technology of it.
   So much so that Carey is not just a daily consumer of podcasted talk
shows about technology and politics but a fledgling podcaster himself. He
has a regular audience of about 50 people who download his ''definitely
not polished spoken musings about life, personal electronics, and even
the importance of getting your brakes checked -- a ''podcast he made and
instantly posted from his cellphone while sitting outside the Sears repair
shop one day recently.
   ''This is technology that gives me a voice I never had a month ago,
Carey said. ''It's amazing how someone can now make a cellphone call that
can be heard all around the world.
   If Internet-based weblogs turned everyone into a potential newspaper
columnist, and digital cameras let them become photojournalists,
podcasting is promising to let everyone with a microphone and a computer
become a radio commentator.
   A key factor driving the blossoming trend is the booming sales of
Apple's iPod music devices. Financial analysts expect Apple to sell more
than 4 million units during the three months ending with Christmas, double
the rate of sales just three months earlier.
   Many retailers are calling the iPod this year's must-have gift craze
like Cabbage Patch dolls or the Rubik's Cube from decades past. Nearly 6
million iPods have been sold globally, and they account for nearly 90
percent of the market for portable digital music players that work off a
computer-chip memory.
   Two other geek-speak trends, weblogs and TiVo, also help explain the
podcasting phenomenon. Like weblogs, anything-goes Web pages in which
bloggers post observations and links to pages they recommend, podcasts are
a vehicle for delivering highly specialized, eclectic content to narrow
audiences. Like weblogs, many sound more like a heart-to-heart
conversation -- or rant -- than a radio broadcast.
   Podcasts have also been called ''TiVo for radio, referring to the
TiVo digital video recording boxes that let people record hours' worth of
television broadcasts to watch later when they want, and with the benefit
of a fast-forward button, too.
   A podcast clearinghouse called iPodderx.com now typically offers 900
to 1,700 podcasts each day, ranging from news on God to information about
sex, vegan diets, and music from obscure amateur artists.
   A heavy focus is chat about information technology and computers,
including ''Tech Chick Weekly, offering ''a female perspective on geek
issues. Many podcasts are largely aural recreations of conventional
weblogs by the bloggers themselves.
   ''The cool thing about podcasts is I listen to them when I want to,
said Steve Garfield, 46, a video producer and editor from Jamaica Plain
who has tuned into a podcast called ''Trade Secrets since it went live on
Sept. 1. The show is co-produced by Adam Curry, a former host on the MTV
music video channel, and Dave Winer, a software developer who has produced
a Google-style search engine called iPodder. Winer's service not only
tracks down podcasts, it arranges for new ones to be automatically
syndicated to listeners' devices, which can just as easily be personal
computers as iPods.
   Garfield loves loading up his iPod, before taking a long walk around
Jamaica Pond, with the latest edition of ''The Dawn and Drew Show, the
real-life and often off-color bantering of a husband and wife in rural
Wisconsin. He also likes downloading one of the few mass-market shows now
being podcast, ''Morning Stories on Boston's WGBH-FM public radio
station.
   The podcast version of ''Morning Stories, five-minute human-interest
segments, has posted numbers that people in the radio business would envy.
   In the past two months, the audience for the podcast segments of the
show has grown 12,000-fold, from a grand total of five downloads for the
entire month of September to 60,000 in November, according to producer
Tony Kahn.
   As a public station that doesn't have ads to skip, WGBH has nothing to
lose by making broadcasts available for free. Bob Lyons, director of radio
and new media initiatives for WGBH, said that technologically, ''it's
trivial to reformat a broadcast for 

burning ape files in nero

2005-02-18 Thread aad leeflang
hello all,
i was trying to burn a .ape file on a cd witnero, 6, but i get a message that 
the file can not be processed because it is protected.
i allso tried to use the .cue file but i get the same message.
i can play the file in winamp and i have quite a few plugins around here but 
probably not a plugin for nero and .ape.
or does nero not support this format/
aad


aad leeflang rotterdam   the netherlands.
email and msn: [EMAIL PROTECTED]  
http://www.tripledutch.org
skype: aad_leeflang

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A Soundforge Question

2005-02-18 Thread Gary Wood
Hi all.  I have registered the Noise Reduction of Soundforge.  Before that, 
I've copied some CD's, but have the excess noise.  Is there a way to take the 
noise out of those with Soundforge?  I went to drive D to play the CD with the 
noise I want to get rid of.  I usually find it on my local disk C, so I went 
there, copied to the clipboard, then alt tabbed to the D drive, and pasted it 
to the clipboard.  I found that I could do that.  If this works, it would be 
great if I didn't have to copy the CD over again, and create coasters.  I also 
would like to do some pitch shifting from material I've copied onto CD, and do 
the same, without having to copy a whole new CD again.  What does anybody think 
about this?
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