Adrosoft Software. AD Sound Tools 1.3. AD Sound Tools is a real-time software that provides effective use of your PC sound devices. It includes a signal generator, a recorder, two oscilloscopes and two spectrum analyzers. The program allows to control your recording device in time and frequency domains, record a signal to WAV file and then convert it to MP3 one. All Sound Recorder Vista is a real-time compression, conversion and DSP programm. Voice activated recording. NO Stereo Mix required. Built-in player and Tag Editor. HD quality recording, recording. All Sound Recorder Vista is a real-time compression, conversion and DSP programm. Voice activated recording. NO Stereo Mix required. Built-in player and Tag Editor. HD quality recording, recording.
Free Sound Recorder
If it helps using All Sound Recorder Vista (or anything else)...
PC/laptop hardware makers often disable audio recording from anything other than the mic/line-in jacks as a means of supporting DRM. IMHO always search for solutions using your hardware make/model, & if that fails look for solutions based on similar or identical audio hardware -- if you're lucky someone's already figured out a fix... I've read of it sometimes being a single registry value.
Perhaps using a cable [to *loop back*] is simplest of all, but it has it's minor negatives too... For a cable all you need is a plug on one end that matches/fits the speaker/headphone out, & the other end fits, plugs into the mic/line-in. You can pick them up *Very* cheap from places like meritline.com on sale [I think they had one recently for something like 69 cents shipped], or head over to RadioShack [IMHO Best Buy's usually a bit high].
Problems include 1) you sometimes cannot monitor what you're recording because you're taking up the only headphone jack & using it turns off speakers, 2) you can't alter the input volume level as easily as using some external hardware with a knob, 3) too long a cable with a laptop can be annoying, 4) it can be a PITA to plug a cable in/out on the back of your PC etc...
One potential fix is supplementing the current, often on-board audio chipset/card -- for PCs soundcards are available *very* cheap, & for both PCs & laptops, you could always try a $2-$3 USB device from a place like Meritline.com when they have them on sale [if you don't like it, or do love it but wish you'd bought a more expensive version you're not out much at all -- here's an example though it's not on sale now http://goo.gl/xuGOS ]. Places like Best Buy also sell small boxes/devices that give you 2 or more outputs to share headphones when the source [your PC/laptop] has only one out jack, & some include volume controls & some have small amps built-in. Whether you use one of those devices or a simple splitter [ http://goo.gl/NWadU ] to supply the signal to both the input jack & your headphones/speakers bear in mind that you're also making that signal weaker to everything that's plugged in, so a built-in amp *might* be worth it [headphones can & do vary in how much power they require].
And finally, there's often nothing wrong at all with using maybe less common alternatives... If you already have, or need an excuse to buy an audio recorder [e.g. http://goo.gl/k2s17 ] that could work for you -- inside a PC/laptop is after all a terrible place to record audio because of all the electrical noise & interference. You can also consider hardware like the now very cheap USB video capture devices -- a bonus to anyone doing long recordings might be that the audio in video files can be lossless & unlike .wav can get as big as necessary [you most often don't want .wav over 2 GB, & can't go >4 GB].
PC/laptop hardware makers often disable audio recording from anything other than the mic/line-in jacks as a means of supporting DRM. IMHO always search for solutions using your hardware make/model, & if that fails look for solutions based on similar or identical audio hardware -- if you're lucky someone's already figured out a fix... I've read of it sometimes being a single registry value.
Perhaps using a cable [to *loop back*] is simplest of all, but it has it's minor negatives too... For a cable all you need is a plug on one end that matches/fits the speaker/headphone out, & the other end fits, plugs into the mic/line-in. You can pick them up *Very* cheap from places like meritline.com on sale [I think they had one recently for something like 69 cents shipped], or head over to RadioShack [IMHO Best Buy's usually a bit high].
Problems include 1) you sometimes cannot monitor what you're recording because you're taking up the only headphone jack & using it turns off speakers, 2) you can't alter the input volume level as easily as using some external hardware with a knob, 3) too long a cable with a laptop can be annoying, 4) it can be a PITA to plug a cable in/out on the back of your PC etc...
One potential fix is supplementing the current, often on-board audio chipset/card -- for PCs soundcards are available *very* cheap, & for both PCs & laptops, you could always try a $2-$3 USB device from a place like Meritline.com when they have them on sale [if you don't like it, or do love it but wish you'd bought a more expensive version you're not out much at all -- here's an example though it's not on sale now http://goo.gl/xuGOS ]. Places like Best Buy also sell small boxes/devices that give you 2 or more outputs to share headphones when the source [your PC/laptop] has only one out jack, & some include volume controls & some have small amps built-in. Whether you use one of those devices or a simple splitter [ http://goo.gl/NWadU ] to supply the signal to both the input jack & your headphones/speakers bear in mind that you're also making that signal weaker to everything that's plugged in, so a built-in amp *might* be worth it [headphones can & do vary in how much power they require].
And finally, there's often nothing wrong at all with using maybe less common alternatives... If you already have, or need an excuse to buy an audio recorder [e.g. http://goo.gl/k2s17 ] that could work for you -- inside a PC/laptop is after all a terrible place to record audio because of all the electrical noise & interference. You can also consider hardware like the now very cheap USB video capture devices -- a bonus to anyone doing long recordings might be that the audio in video files can be lossless & unlike .wav can get as big as necessary [you most often don't want .wav over 2 GB, & can't go >4 GB].
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All Sound Recorder Vista 1.3 Windows 7
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All Sound Recorder Vista 1.3
mike – 9 years ago – ¿Te ha parecido útil este comentario?si|no(+37)