I thought this was really cool: http://www.paulcolligan.com/2006/10/17/levelator-hack-1-levelate-your-garageband-podcast-in-4-simple-steps/ You can levelate your garageband podcast to improve sound quality. I just got my mac today, so i'm going to play around with that.
On 11/28/06, Kary Rogers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:>> I've used Levelator with good results. The specific cases that I used> it for were recordings at a theatre with nothing but the built in> camera microphone. You could hear the audience laughing easily but the> people on stage, not so much. I extracted the audio, ran it through> Levelator and then imported the resulting "levelated" audio file.>> http://www.gigavox.com/levelator>> HTH,>> -kr>> On Nov 28, 2006, at 8:42 PM, Angus McIntyre wrote:>> > Can anyone recommend a tool for improving sound quality on recorded> > video? Something that's optimized for speech would be the preferred> > choice, and Macintosh freeware would be ideal. A friend wants to> > clean up a recording of a presentation and says that the speaker's> > voice is almost unintelligible due to poor recording quality.> >> > The picture apparently isn't great either - I haven't seen or heard> > the footage myself, I'm only going by what she says - so any hints or> > tools that might improve the appearance of poor-quality camcorder> > footage would also be welcome.> >> > Thanks,> >> > Angus>> --> Kary Rogers> http://karyhead.com>> >-- [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] _________________________________________________________________ Check the weather nationwide with MSN Search: Try it now! http://search.msn.com/results.aspx?q=weather&FORM=WLMTAG [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]