On Tue 17 Jun 03, 6:59 AM, Henry House <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said: > I am looking to do some sound recording on Linux. Specifically, I want to > digitise some valuble old audiotapes before they or my tape player decay. So > I think I need a sound card. Criteria: > > * high quality analog-to-digital converter in stereo > * input from tape deck via cable for said converter > * Linux support, of course > * Reasonable cost > > Any recommendations?
yes. i don't have an answer, but i know where you can get one. 1. the linux audio quality howto. i found this by accident. it's not a real howto, so it's not on tldp.org. you'll have to google for it. 2. the linux-audio-user mailing list. i've briefly scanned the audio quality howto, and some of the information surprised me, so i don't want to say anything other than "see for yourself". for instance, the AWE 32/64 which i assumed was an all around excellent sound card, has a really poor A/D converter. i tried to convert a record onto digital format, and the results were really poor. later i found the howto and it confirmed that the poor quality wasn't my fault. another option, depending on how dear your audio is, is to get a professional to do it. i had a professional sound engineer in new york city convert an LP to CD. it's these guys' jobs to know everything there is to know about noise and hiss reduction. people like you and me rely on the knowledge of whoever wrote the application we're using. IIRC, it was about $25 to convert the LP with noise reduction. it took them nearly a week to do it, but that week contained 9/11 so the subways weren't operating in manhattan. they probably took a few days off... ;) anyway, they accept mail-ins, and i can give you their address if you're interested. pete -- GPG Instructions: http://www.dirac.org/linux/gpg GPG Fingerprint: B9F1 6CF3 47C4 7CD8 D33E 70A9 A3B9 1945 67EA 951D _______________________________________________ vox-tech mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.lugod.org/mailman/listinfo/vox-tech
