RECORD ANY SOUND YOUR COMPUTER MAKES
Your computer is a marvelous piece of technology. It can display
just about anything you can imagine. Photographic images can display
pictures found in newspapers, magazines and publications you may not
even know exist. Full-motion video can play DVD movies,
television shows, news programming, if it's out there, your computer
can more than likely display it. Then there are the sounds. Just the
other day I was looking for an audio sample of a baying wolf. No
problem. In fact, I found that I could choose from several
selections including the gender and age of the wolf. But there was
one small problem after I found what I was looking for. I couldn't
save the sound I found to my disc.
Too often and for many reasons, you will find that you can PLAY
sounds on your computer but you have no way to SAVE them once you
find them. Granted there may be sound, legal reasons why you can't
save or manipulate the audio such as being copyrighted. But too
often, the reason you can't save the file is simply because whatever
source you've accessed simply doesn't offer a Save mechanism. But
Ambrosia Software has just released a utility that will let you
capture any sound your computer can make and save it to disc.
Basically, the idea behind WireTap Studio is a simple one. If it
comes out of your computer's speakers, you can capture and save it
to disc. But WireTap Studio actually goes way beyond just capturing
audio. Ambrosia Software says this is a first. Their WireTap Studio
lets you actually preview the audio you are about to capture and
lets you hear exactly what it will sound like when using different
audio formats and sampling rates on the fly.
This ability is called LivePreview. When you begin to play whatever
audio on the computer and you click the LivePreview button, the
audio goes back about one second so that you are actually hearing
the sound moving through the WireTap Studio program instead of the
actual source that's generating the sound. Now when you select the
different format and compression options such as mp3 sampled at
128kbps, you instantly hear how the audio sounds with that codec
applied. Move the sampling rate down to 64kbps and you'll hear the
degradation as you begin to lose some of the higher frequencies.
Select 8kbps and hear compression at its worst. But if the audio is
of just someone talking as opposed to music, then you may be
surprised how little difference there is between the sampling rates.
And selecting the lower rate will make those audio files so much
smaller, saving you storage space and making their transfer to
another location that much faster. This feature alone makes WireTap
Studio a necessary addition to your audio toolbox.
WireTap Studio lets you record from any software and any in-line
hardware audio source. And after you capture the audio, WireTap
Studio's built-in editor lets you refine your audio capture by
letting you select any segment.
You can apply some of the included filters that can enhance the
sounds with filters and audio effects.
The other really nifty feature is WireTap Studio's ability to
capture two audio sources at the same time. You can then choose to
combine them or edit each one by itself.
Other features include lossless audio editing so that you can crop,
silence, even delete the audio and then come back later and undo all
your changes. If you record with a bit rate that was too low
and you decide you want to improve its sound, you won't have to
re-record the audio or deal with re-compression.
WireTap Studio is only available for the Macintosh. For all of
WireTap Studio's abilities, you can check out a free demo at the
Ambrosia website. If you decide to keep it, it will only cost
you $69. Now that's the sweetest sound of all.
www.ambrosiasw.com
| Craig Crossman is
a McClatchy-Tribune newspaper columnist writing about computers and
technology. He also hosts the nation's longest running nationally syndicated radio talk show on
computers and technology, Computer America, heard on both the Business TalkRadio
Network® and the Lifestyle TalkRadio Network®, weeknights at 10PM Eastern
time. Visit his website at http://www.computeramerica.com |
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