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ReActor
Jun 1, 2000

MEANIE
If you have the necessary location equipment (portable recorder, lapel or shotgun mic) you might as well try that first. Close miking can be surprisingly effective and you might find that the background noise doesn't actually come through that much. Of course, if the results are unsatisfactory, you can replace in the studio and you've lost nothing. Aside from some time, I guess.

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ReActor
Jun 1, 2000

MEANIE
I seek advice on recording my computer's audio output back into the computer. On my old laptop, Audiograbber could do this and I'm pretty sure Audacity could as well. However, neither program gives the option to do this on my new computer.

I looked in the Audacity help and it says:

quote:

Due to copyright concerns, newer computers often lack an input for recording computer playback, or it must be specially enabled outside Audacity.

Is this something that newer soundcards simply prevent you from doing? Or is there perhaps a driver I could get that would allow this?

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