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#1
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I've been pestering SONY tech support for a few weeks to find out why
pcm recordings I make on my HiMD unit vanish after I transfer them (via USB) to my PC. Never did get a satisfactory answer from them, but a contributor to the alt.audio.minidisc NG solved the problem. There's a checkbox in the Transfer dialog that instructs SonicStage to leave the original recordings on the MD alone. It works. I had had good luck transferring pcm recordings and then converting them with SONY's Wave Convertor program, but was miffed that SonicStage was deleting them after the transfer. That's no longer an issue. So, I'm pleased. I have recorded my wife's vocal group with the HiMD unit by connecting it to the mixer. It's only two tracks, and not stereo, since I'm recording the PA feed, but the quality is adequate for our purposes. I recorded some silence--mixer gain all the way down--to see how much noise was sneaking through (or getting generated by the HiMD MZ-NH900). Sound Forge reports that it's below -70dB in the converted .wav file. Listening with phones with the gain WAY up doesn't disclose anything objectionable - no digital rattles, hum, etc. Jason |
#2
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#3
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#4
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![]() In article writes: I've rarely seen more paranoic approach as to copy protecting other than Sonic Stage. You can only from within the program transfer the files via USB 1.1. Well, the original Sony NetMD would certainly qualify. That was the system that wouldn't let you transfer a file out of the USB port at all unless it go on the Minidisk from the computer. In other words, no file transfers of original recordings. For a 1 hr. 25. min 44/16 file you need abt. an hour to transfer. Sounds like a project for when you're around doing something else. On the Jukebox 3, a USB 1.1 transfer of an hour's worth of recording takes about 15 minutes, give or take a cup of coffee. I understand that Firewire is much faster, but I don't have a computer with a Firewire port so I haven't experienced it. The program is so weird that it calls a Sony database via Internet not only at the first install but also later, as it seems fit (perhaps after defragmeting, a work with the registry or so). It refuses to load until the Internet connection is established and it checks its status in the database. Well, I guess that makes it useless in a field application unless you happen to have a phone line or a wireless Internet connection. So is there any advantage of the HiMD over some other media (other than perhaps that it sounds better than a cassette)? Curious minds want to know what Sony was thinking of, and why some perfectly respectable people were waiting for this technology with baited breath. -- I'm really Mike Rivers ) However, until the spam goes away or Hell freezes over, lots of IP addresses are blocked from this system. If you e-mail me and it bounces, use your secret decoder ring and reach me he double-m-eleven-double-zero at yahoo |
#6
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J Warren wrote in message ...
I've been pestering SONY tech support for a few weeks to find out why pcm recordings I make on my HiMD unit vanish after I transfer them (via USB) to my PC. Never did get a satisfactory answer from them, but a contributor to the alt.audio.minidisc NG solved the problem. There's a checkbox in the Transfer dialog that instructs SonicStage to leave the original recordings on the MD alone. It works. I had had good luck transferring pcm recordings and then converting them with SONY's Wave Convertor program, but was miffed that SonicStage was deleting them after the transfer. That's no longer an issue. So, I'm pleased. I have recorded my wife's vocal group with the HiMD unit by connecting it to the mixer. It's only two tracks, and not stereo, since I'm recording the PA feed, but the quality is adequate for our purposes. I recorded some silence--mixer gain all the way down--to see how much noise was sneaking through (or getting generated by the HiMD MZ-NH900). Sound Forge reports that it's below -70dB in the converted .wav file. Listening with phones with the gain WAY up doesn't disclose anything objectionable - no digital rattles, hum, etc. Jason Have you compared the ATRAC mode to the PCM mode? Can you hear a difference? Really? Mark |
#7
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#8
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#9
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#11
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(Mike Rivers) wrote in message news:znr1101649147k@trad...
In article writes: What's with Sony that they have such distrain for their customers. Could be that they own more intellectual property (music, film and video) than any other electronic hardware manufacturer. I think SONY has the Bill Gates disease... |
#12
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Edi Zubovic edi.zubovic[rem wrote in message . ..
(snippage) Oh, well. I can't afford a Nagra V and yes, there are other solutions already present competing to the HiMD as to portability. Apart from flash media recorders, old-style Creative Nomad jukeboxes with built-in line inputs and laptops with external audio interfaces, what is there? AFAIK, the newer portables (Ipods, Nomad jukeboxes, etc.) cannot record from a mic or line input. |
#13
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![]() (Mike Rivers) wrote in message news:znr1101649147k@trad... Could be that they own more intellectual property (music, film and video) than any other electronic hardware manufacturer. Well, they act like they own MINE too. All I want is easy access to my own original recordings. Frank /~ http://newmex.com/f10 @/ |
#14
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Paul wrote:
(Mike Rivers) wrote in message news:znr1101649147k@trad... In article writes: What's with Sony that they have such distrain for their customers. Could be that they own more intellectual property (music, film and video) than any other electronic hardware manufacturer. I think SONY has the Bill Gates disease... No, Sony is a bunch of different divisions that don't talk to one another. Hell, the professional and consumer divisions are practically at war with one another. The Sony Pictures folks and the Sony Music people don't talk to the consumer or pro audio people either. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#15
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![]() Edi Zubovic edi.zubovic[rem wrote: From the techincal/hardware side, the MZ-NH1 is a little gem, though. I'm not surprised to read about the way Sony has crippled data transfer out of their Hi-MD recorders and how they've selected a proprietrary data format. Sony has no interest in making high quality home recording and copying easy. Following Sony's usual consumer product script, the MZ-NH1 will be discontinued in roughly a year, not be economical to repair once it's out of warranty, and parts for it will not be stocked after roughly three years. -- Len Moskowitz PDAudio, Binaural Mics, Cables, DPA, M-Audio Core Sound http://www.stealthmicrophones.com Teaneck, New Jersey USA http://www.core-sound.com Tel: 201-801-0812, FAX: 201-801-0912 |
#16
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![]() Paul wrote: Apart from flash media recorders, old-style Creative Nomad jukeboxes with built-in line inputs and laptops with external audio interfaces, what is there? AFAIK, the newer portables (Ipods, Nomad jukeboxes, etc.) cannot record from a mic or line input. You might have a look at our PDAudio system: www.core-sound.com/HighResRecorderNews.html -- Len Moskowitz PDAudio, Binaural Mics, Cables, DPA, M-Audio Core Sound http://www.stealthmicrophones.com Teaneck, New Jersey USA http://www.core-sound.com Tel: 201-801-0812, FAX: 201-801-0912 |
#17
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#18
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On 2004-11-27, Mike Rivers wrote:
Well, the original Sony NetMD would certainly qualify. That was the system that wouldn't let you transfer a file out of the USB port at all unless it go on the Minidisk from the computer. In other words, no file transfers of original recordings. I have a problem with anything that seeks to lock me out of my OWN recordings of my OWN music. It's their right to swing their fist, until it hits my nose. Their copy protection infringes my rights when it forbids me to access my own music. Sony missed an opportunity to revolutionize the home recording industry here. |
#19
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On 2004-11-29, Frank Vuotto wrote:
Well, they act like they own MINE too. All I want is easy access to my own original recordings. I believe you could make a case that you have a fundamental right to access your own recordings, and that Sony is abridging your rights by actively preventing your access. Okay, so nobody is going to hire Johnny Cochran to press the matter, but I really do believe your rights (both copyright and first amendment, and possibly others) are abridged by a deliberate act of Sony. Your rights are fundamental, and trump whatever they think gives them the right to abridge yours. I may come across as a raving madman on this issue, but I am a reasonable person, and I am totally serious. I seriously believe that by locking YOU out of YOUR intellecutal property, Sony is violating MY rights as well as yours. |
#20
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On 2004-11-29, Len Moskowitz wrote:
I'm not surprised to read about the way Sony has crippled data transfer out of their Hi-MD recorders and how they've selected a proprietrary data format. Sony has no interest in making high quality home recording and copying easy. I'd heard they had, and that you could use the new sony MD's as an uninhibited digital recorder. Now I understand I was misinformed. Pity. Perhaps nonvolatile storage devices like flash will reach the price points such as currently held by minidisc or CDR. |
#21
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Following Sony's usual consumer product script, the MZ-NH1 will be
discontinued in roughly a year, not be economical to repair once it's out of warranty, and parts for it will not be stocked after roughly three years. You forgot proprietary storage media and software on par with hazardous waste. -John O |
#22
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On or about Sat, 27 Nov 2004 18:42:00 +0100, Edi Zubovic edi.zubovic[rem
allegedly wrote: HiMD records PCM in a file with the proprietary extension "*.oma". Up to recently, Sonic Stage hasn't even been capable of transferring it to any other usable format; it merely offered listening to a transferred recording with its own player. It's a totally useless approach. Oh yes, it offered burning a "ATRAC-CD" (???), the kind of CD writing I don't bother to think about and I don't frankly know where I could listen to such Atrac CD's. The other day I saw a glossy flogging CD & DVD players, and all the Sony ones offered ATRAC-CD playback. I wondered what that might be for. Now I suppose I know, though I don't think I'll go rushing out to get one. Noel Bachelor noelbachelorAT(From:_domain) Language Recordings Inc (Darwin Australia) |
#23
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![]() james of tucson wrote: On 2004-11-29, Len Moskowitz wrote: I'm not surprised to read about the way Sony has crippled data transfer out of their Hi-MD recorders and how they've selected a proprietrary data format. Sony has no interest in making high quality home recording and copying easy. I'd heard they had, and that you could use the new sony MD's as an uninhibited digital recorder. Now I understand I was misinformed. Pity. Perhaps nonvolatile storage devices like flash will reach the price points such as currently held by minidisc or CDR. You are only denied digital uploadability of recordings made from the digital input of a HiMD. Granted, that's a big _only_ if the pre's on the HiMD are as noisy as on previous models. Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
#24
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(Len Moskowitz) wrote in message ...
Paul wrote: Apart from flash media recorders, old-style Creative Nomad jukeboxes with built-in line inputs and laptops with external audio interfaces, what is there? AFAIK, the newer portables (Ipods, Nomad jukeboxes, etc.) cannot record from a mic or line input. You might have a look at our PDAudio system: www.core-sound.com/HighResRecorderNews.html Which PDA's do you recommend for the backbone of a PDA-based recording system? What specs should I look for? - Paul |
#25
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![]() Paul wrote: Which PDA's do you recommend for the backbone of a PDA-based recording system? What specs should I look for? The HP iPAQ h2215 and h2210 are reasonably priced (under $250) and very small PDAs that works fine as a high resolution audio recorder. It records to SD flash memory cards. With a single 1 GB card, it can record 92 minutes at 16/44.1 (CD quality) or an hour at 24-bit/44.1. It will easily fit into your shirt pocket with room to spare and also supports 24/96 recording. You can use more than one card for seamless, continuous recording for pretty much as long as you like. Gidluck Mastering's Live2496 recording program provides this neat feature. And SanDisk (the flash memory manufacturer) says that their 2 GB SD cards will be released before the end of the year. That will let you double the recording time per card. If you need recording times up to hundreds of hours, please contact us for other system configurations. -- Len Moskowitz PDAudio, Binaural Mics, Cables, DPA, M-Audio Core Sound http://www.stealthmicrophones.com Teaneck, New Jersey USA http://www.core-sound.com Tel: 201-801-0812, FAX: 201-801-0912 |
#26
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Frank Vuotto wrote:
Sony has settled with Ampex for $40 million over patent litigation which relates to digital still and digital video cameras as well as PDA's. Back in July this year Ampex announced that it was aiming to block Sony from importing and selling products in the US which contained Ampex's intellectual property. Ampex has already come to license agreements with Canon, Sanyo and Kodak worth several tens of millions of dollars. Ampex currently has outstanding litigation against Kodak for violation of the same patents. It looks as though Ampex will come out from these agreements with ongoing royalty payments too. Their patents related to "image storage and retrieval". ....as anyone who ever worked with a VPR-3/Zeus would understand why. IMO it's always good to see actual pioneer patentholders (the ones with decades of manufacturing experience) receiving royalties--I've seen way too much paid of late on theoretical patents acquired by rollups. |
#27
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"Kurt Albershardt" wrote in message
IMO it's always good to see actual pioneer patentholders (the ones with decades of manufacturing experience) receiving royalties--I've seen way too much paid of late on theoretical patents acquired by rollups. That probably won't make much of a dent in the financials of Sony, which had $72 billion in sales for 2003. But Ampex's suit could net it some much-needed money, since it lost $5.8 million in 2003 on sales of $43.4 million. "If Ampex gets even just a tiny percentage of Sony sales in licensing fees, that would produce some serious revenue for Ampex," says Bromberg. Looks like some mining might be happening in this case: http://www.forbes.com/infoimaging/20...14sony_ii.html "Patent mining has become a popular activity in the tech sector," says Future Image analyst Paul Worthington. "Digital imaging is particularly vulnerable to this practice because it's such a hot business and because, although no technology is built in a vacuum, digital imaging builds upon so many previous technologies." "But Ampex's suit could net it some much-needed money, since it lost $5.8 million in 2003 on sales of $43.4 million. "If Ampex gets even just a tiny percentage of Sony sales in licensing fees, that would produce some serious revenue for Ampex," says Bromberg. " |
#28
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james of tucson wrote:
On 2004-11-29, Frank Vuotto wrote: Well, they act like they own MINE too. All I want is easy access to my own original recordings. I believe you could make a case that you have a fundamental right to access your own recordings, and that Sony is abridging your rights by actively preventing your access. I agree that this makes the product worthless. So why buy it...? By paying you accept Sony's offer and you have an agreement with Sony. Once you have agreed, well ... you have accepted the restrictions. Lars -- lars farm // http://www.farm.se lars is also a mail-account on the server farm.se |
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