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#1
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I have been asked by a friend to move everything from his audio cassette
catalog to compact disk. It's a series of topic talks on approx: 60 cassettes. He would like to be able to duplicate the CD's on demand. It's a very low volume operation. We want to do this in house. Currently he uses a cassette duplicator that copies three cassettes at once, both sides at once at high speed. So, here are my questions: 1) What would be the best software for a non sophisticated user to record audio cassettes into a PC? I personally use Sound Forge which is overkill for him. I'd like to find lower cost easy to use software with editing capability (volume level matching, limited EQ, cut and paste etc). He is an older gentleman who wants to learn to do this on his own so I don't want something too difficult to learn. We will create each master CD on the PC. We have the sound board and disk space. 2) What would you recommend for a low cost stand alone CD Duplicator? From what I've seen I'm leaning toward something like an Octave tower drive. It has a four recording trays with an 80Gig hard disk to hold 72 CD images. It cost approx $900. This sounds ideal to me. 3) We didn't talk too much about CD label/disk printing, if there are any suggestions on this I'd appreciate it. If there is a more appropriate place to post let me know. Thanks in advance. Kevin |
#2
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![]() In article writes: I have been asked by a friend to move everything from his audio cassette catalog to compact disk. It's a series of topic talks on approx: 60 cassettes. He would like to be able to duplicate the CD's on demand. It's a very low volume operation. We want to do this in house. Currently he uses a cassette duplicator that copies three cassettes at once, both sides at once at high speed. It's going to be hard to match that speed and simplicity without a pretty hefty investment in time. Fortunately it won't cost a whole lot of money, but some. 1) What would be the best software for a non sophisticated user to record audio cassettes into a PC? I personally use Sound Forge which is overkill for him. I'd like to find lower cost easy to use software with editing capability (volume level matching, limited EQ, cut and paste etc). Most of the "popular" recording and editing programs are about the same, and each version tries to add more features than the last generation of the competition. The only one that's significantly different in the way it works, which being an older gentleman myself, I find much easier to understand and use is Fast Edit (I see they finally started spelling and typing it in the conventional manner) from http://www.minnetonkaaudio.com. It's very intuitive and fast. I hope they're not going out of business. I just checked the web site to verify the spelling and found that the links to "products" other than their surround mastering programs on the home page were dead. One thing that will require an intermediate step if you want to maked indexed CDs is you'll have to pick those index points by hand/ear and insert them manually. Unless the Diamond Cut people (who were talking about this a couple of years ago) have software for it, your typical recording/editing program won't insert CD index marks on the fly. While the people using cassettes never had this convenience, chances are that in CD format, they'll expect it. 2) What would you recommend for a low cost stand alone CD Duplicator? From what I've seen I'm leaning toward something like an Octave tower drive. It has a four recording trays with an 80Gig hard disk to hold 72 CD images. It cost approx $900. This sounds ideal to me. I don't have a lot of experience with those, but they're becoming more prevalent and the prices are dropping. I saw a stack of Microboards two-drive (one master, one dupe) duplicators at Guitar Center last week for $250. Primera and Diskmakers both have a line of sub-$1000 CD duplicators that work off a stack and can label the disks as well as duplicate the audio. -- I'm really Mike Rivers - ) |
#3
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#4
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Thanks for the responses. I'm reading about a "Digital Audio Editor"
program called GoldWave. For $40 it includes noise reduction and pop/click filters that some programs want you to purchase as an add-in. I'm sure feature this will be usefull to him. http://www.goldwave.com/index.html The others programs look interesting but this one might be the best value yet. I'm going to check out those duplicators mentioned as well. Good suggestions for me to follow up. Thanks very much. Kevin "Kevin" wrote in message ... I have been asked by a friend to move everything from his audio cassette catalog to compact disk. It's a series of topic talks on approx: 60 cassettes. He would like to be able to duplicate the CD's on demand. It's a very low volume operation. We want to do this in house. Currently he uses a cassette duplicator that copies three cassettes at once, both sides at once at high speed. So, here are my questions: 1) What would be the best software for a non sophisticated user to record audio cassettes into a PC? I personally use Sound Forge which is overkill for him. I'd like to find lower cost easy to use software with editing capability (volume level matching, limited EQ, cut and paste etc). He is an older gentleman who wants to learn to do this on his own so I don't want something too difficult to learn. We will create each master CD on the PC. We have the sound board and disk space. 2) What would you recommend for a low cost stand alone CD Duplicator? From what I've seen I'm leaning toward something like an Octave tower drive. It has a four recording trays with an 80Gig hard disk to hold 72 CD images. It cost approx $900. This sounds ideal to me. 3) We didn't talk too much about CD label/disk printing, if there are any suggestions on this I'd appreciate it. If there is a more appropriate place to post let me know. Thanks in advance. Kevin |
#5
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![]() "Justin Ulysses Morse" wrote But if he REALLY wants to burn multiple copies at once, it can be done using Feurio! (last I checked it was distributed by Nero but may be fully independent now, try http://www.feurio.com ). Feurio is shareware but you have to pay for it if you want multiple-burner support. I paid $70 or so for a 2-burner license. Excellent suggestion. I have a $70 2-burner license as well. A great, simple and very dependable burning package. The editting feature makes putting index marks in a dream. 3) We didn't talk too much about CD label/disk printing, if there are any suggestions on this I'd appreciate it. I don't remember seeing it mentioned before, but for quick one-ofs, I think the Casio thermal printer is really slick. It costs about $100 and is head and shoulders above labels and far as professional appearance. It only does one color, and you have to manually flip the disk if you want to print the top *and* bottom half, but it looks really neat. I doubt 99% of the population could tell it from silk screened graphics. I always get comments when I hand over a demo. - Tommy |
#6
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![]() "Mike Rivers" wrote in message news:znr1057885425k@trad... In article writes: You can move track (and index) marks around after initial placement, but there's no need to miss the desired point at initial placement, given that you can just enlarge the time scale as required to position them by eye and ear quite precisely (to the nearest sample which will probably get rounded to nearest frame). No need to miss as long as you listen through that segment and spot where you want to put the track marker. True, but often the listening part is often optional for me. As time wears on, I'm more likely to use listening more to confirm things that I did more and more visually. I was thinking about hitting the F8 key as you were playing the cassette into the computer. I'm getting the idea that lots of people still use DAW like it is a traditional analog system implemented digitally. I never was much of a serious analog recorder, so I approached digital with a clean slate. IMO visual-centric editing is the way to go. It's like scrubbing. People complain that you can't scrub on a PC DAW. My question is why would you want to scrub if you can edit visually with so much higher resolution? I generally don't listen or watch while I'm digitizing analog media. I set the operation up with more than enough headroom and find something else interesting and useful to do. Often my first edit after digizing is to remove 2 minutes of silence at the end if you catch my drift. You'd probably be a little late with that unless there was plenty of space between sections, and even then, you might want to trim it up. There's also the issue of control latency. I don't know how CEP compares to other products in this regard, but its controls seem to be pretty rubbery to me while its playing or recording. CEPs punch-ins are pretty good, but IME the punch-outs are approximate to say the least, particularly when recording say 10 tracks at a time. No, it can be done by eye in very little time. I think it took me about 2 minutes to put 8-12 marks in about 20 minutes of live audio. It depends on the program material. If the song stops and the applause starts immediately, and the performer starts talking over the applause, it can all look like grass, and you need to make a judgment call (by ear) as to where to put the index. In the overview sense, yes. However singing, applause and talking almost always look very different to me. I generally make the track mark or index mark decision visually and change it only if it fails the *final* audition. If I remember the sequence of the music well enough from recording and previous editing steps, the track mark might just go in without any more listening at all. I often click in the track marks, burn a CD and then check the positioning of the track marks while I'm listening to the CD while driving. It doesn't seem to be too hard to have a pretty good batting record at doing this. |
#7
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#9
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I gave it a test run this past weekend and it will do fine for what I'll
need it to do. One very cool feature was the noise filter. I selected a section of noise and had the program remove it. Worked great! The program takes a little getting used to, it's screen re-draw is slow compared to Sound Forge. Whenever you select a section of the audio it appears to recaculate the display. On my 266mhz computer it's slow. Another minor thing I didn't like was that the "vcr" buttons for play, pause etc. were not fixed to the form. You select them and they float. I'd rather have them always available. For low budget it does the trick. Kevin "Mainlander" *@*.* wrote in message . nz... In article , says... Thanks for the responses. I'm reading about a "Digital Audio Editor" program called GoldWave. For $40 it includes noise reduction and pop/click filters that some programs want you to purchase as an add-in. I'm sure feature this will be usefull to him. http://www.goldwave.com/index.html The others programs look interesting but this one might be the best value yet. Goldwave is a very good sound recording /editing program, whether it does what you want I don't know |