Tom, Jack and all retirement hopefuls,
I'm a youngster...only 55. An 83 year old ex-photog / audio
friend of mine told me recently, "I don't know when I ever
found the time to work!"
I hope I'm half as involved and on the ball as he is... next week!
Lou
Lou Houck
Rollin' Recording
208 River Ranch Rd.
Boerne, TX 78006
(830) 537-5494
(830) 537-5495 [ fax ]
lou@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
www.rollinrecording.com
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jack Palmer" <vdalhart@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, April 05, 2007 12:19 AM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Anyone familiar with "Spin It Again" Software to
convert Lps a...
Good luck Tom,
I've been retired 20 years and haven't touched my slides yet. Not
enough time. Jack
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tom Fine" <tflists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, April 04, 2007 6:40 AM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Anyone familiar with "Spin It Again" Software to
convert Lps a...
Hi Steve:
Most if not all standalone recorders let you set a "make-a-new-track
here" threshold. It's not perfect but it's another solution. In
Soundforge, all you do is put mark (the M key) between tracks then
"convert marker to regions" and "save each region as a separate file".
Only takes as long as to scroll thru the waveform and make the marks and
then how long the computer grinds.
As for slides, you are very right that there is expensive outsourcing or
time-consuming DIY but nothing in between. My parents took thousands of
Kodachrome slides and they all are still vivid color but I have not had
the time to tackle that job yet. That will be one of MY retirement
projects.
-- Tom Fine
----- Original Message -----
From: "Steve Ramm" <Stevramm@xxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, April 03, 2007 10:29 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Anyone familiar with "Spin It Again" Software to
convert Lps a...
Thanks guys! Somehow I thought I;d get answers like that knowing this a
highly "technical" group. I know I didn't want to transfer my Lps using
one of
those cheap combo jobs.
Actually at this point in my life - 62 - I'm spending so much time
listening
to new releases of old material (for my monthly column in In The
Groove)
that I'm not about to build up a big library. Basically I want music on
the go.
And, I don't want to be a "sound archive" as my materials isn't THAT
rare!
Look, doesn't everyone have hours of old radio comedy shows? And after
those of
us over 50 (60?) go no one will want them anyway.
My problem with cassettes and reels is that I don't have time to figure
out
where in the tape there is a song I want to hear. Looking at the demo
on Spin
It Again, I fugured I could set up a portable tape player next to my
PC, run
the tape through the software to the PC and it would pretty much
separate the
tracks between silence. Then I could index it and burn to CDs if I
want. My
PC probably has a decent sound card. Heck, I'm happy with the radio
shows I
record with Total Recorder - which at less than $20.00 is something I
love and
it's easy for a dummy like me to use.
Tom, you pointed out value of time. I agree and that's why I wanted
something that would work quickly and easily and I'm not planning on
doing it for
anyone's ears but mine. I have mid range speakers on my stereo and my
MP3
player. I'm into the content not whether the frequency is high or low.
Spin it
again offers declickers in the software. It's low end I realize.
I tried to use Audacity to cut up a long program once and got, not only
stumped, but it took time. It's way too technical for me. And my Dell
PC cost
less than $500. without a monitor so I'm not looking to even put $75.00
more
into a sound card. I just thought this might serve my purpose.
If you guys want, maybe someone can go to their site and look at demo
and
give me thoughts on the downside of using it ASSUMING you want dubbing
for
dummies of mostly speech, voices and some live concert recordings -
that will
eventually be discarded.. and not spend over $50.
Though it's somewhat different, I've been reading a lot of articles
lately
to transfer slides (Photo slides) to digital. I was one of those who
only took
slides cause they were cheaper than prints. I have thousands. Well, the
consensus of all is that there is NO INEXPENSIVE way to do it. If you
have done
by services it comes to about 50 cents per slide scanned. If you do it
yourself
it will take at least 3 minutes per slide to scan and save PLUS the
cost of
a $100. scanner. Multiply this by time value and a few thousand slides
and
you can see it won't work. I have no heirs who will care anyway. But
these
technological changes have really moved fast in our lifetime.
So thanks for the replies. I won't do anything right away but I might
use
their free trial (which lets you record indefinitely but only burn
three CDs or
or save 3 digital files.
Steve
************************************** See what's free at
http://www.aol.com.