Mac is a very good platform to do this, been doing it for years
On the cheap, I recommend "Audacity" a free program that works well.
For digitizing there are many USB or FireWire based external modules that work well. I use an
Edirol UA-5 which I bought years ago. It does 96kHz/24 bits if you want it.
For restoration I don't know of free software, I have been using the Waves restoration bundle,
very happy with it.
All the best
Alex Hartov
Dartmouth Jewish Sound Archive
On Sep 10, 2007, at 8:13 AM, Tom Fine wrote:
Hi All:
I have a friend, an older person, who is very expert in all things analog -- and has a wonderful
setup for playing tapes and records. However, he is far from expert on anything computer and is
not likely to gain the expertise of a 20-year-old ever. He has an iMac and wants to transfer
some of his tapes and records to digital so he can burn CD's for his car.
I live in a PC world, so I'm not sure what's out there for the Mac. I think he's OK making the
CD's in Roxio Toast, but what's a good, simple, non-kludged audio recorder/editor -- in other
words is there a Mac equiv of Sony Soundforge Audio Studio (ie "lite")?
http://www.sonycreativesoftware.com/products/product.asp?pid=454
And, what's a good and simple-as-possible USB interface for him? I think he wants to transfer
96/24, but I think almost any A-D interace will do 96/24 these days. I don't think he has to
have balanced inputs and outputs, but something that can handle +4 input levels would be
preferable. He has no need for mic preamps or any sort of built-in hardware beyond maybe input
trimmers.
So, for the Mac world, does such a simple solution exist? Think the opposite of what a total
"engineer type" would want (ie as few useless "features" as possible, as simple and direct a
user interface as possible -- think of the phones with big number buttons made for old folks as
a model).
Thanks in advance!
-- Tom Fine