In podcasting, this is a technique referred to as a "double ender"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double-ender WhatTheCast, my audio podcast, is recorded as a "multi ender" (same idea, but four hosts). We do a conference call via Skype, and each host sends me their end of the conversation as a WAV file.I synch them and edit them so it sounds like we're all on at the same time. Each host uses a good quality mic and records at 44.1KHz 16-bit, so the end product sounds great. On Fri, Nov 14, 2008 at 3:22 PM, Dom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > OK, I've been searching high and low for a low-cost solution to this > that doesn't involve using phone lines. Essentially it boils down to > this: I live in LA. My co-host lives in Seattle. We'd like to record a > live conversation with similar quality between our voices, meaning I > don't want my voice sounding great and her voice sounding like a > telephone. > > The video portion will utilize voice-over while our content plays > beneath. We may also use animation or puppets along with our voices. > Anyway, you can see that it would be less than ideal to have the > voices at different qualities. Are there any tools for recording two > audio streams live from two separate locations that don't involve > thousands of dollars of audio equipment? Thanks folks! > > Dom Zook > www.gadzookfilms.com > > > ------------------------------------ > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > > > -- ================ Brian Richardson - http://siliconchef.com - http://dragoncontv.com - http://whatthecast.com - http://www.3chip.com