What I did was with a old turn table and 12" black vinil disc; I imaging will be same way with CD; first requairement is to have sound card with IN and OUT connections; maybe you need to find audio RCA STEREO regular AUDIO CABLES; I imaging that you need a small converter from regular stereo cables to just one stereo I think is MINI JACK 3.5 mm you can find on RADIO SHACK; I have NERO 6 software; on that program you see different options; one is NERO EXPRESS; check the manual that come with the program; in this case CREATING YOUR FIRST AUDIO DISC; you needs to record track by track into your Hard disc with identification of the file; always is good read the manual of above reference ( CREATING YOUR FIRST AUDIO DISC ); after you have all the tracks ready follow instructions to burn; I hope help a litle with these steps
Hi, This is a relatively simple task. You will need: * Audacity sound editing software (http://audacity.sourceforge.net) * A cable with 3.5mm jack (male) on both ends (look it up in Google image search if unsure. * An audio-in port on your computer (microphone or line-in) (Note: Some Macs may not have a line-in/microphone port: find out in some way using a manual etc.) * A cassette player with a headphone port and auto-reverse (not neccessary)
1- Connect the equipment to power. Then connect the headphone port on the cassette player to the line-in/microphone port on your computer. 2- Install and launch Audacity. Select the audio source in Audacity (see help files) and press the record button in Audacity. 3- Press play on your cassette player. Make sure the volume is at the appropriate level. 4- Wait for your tape to record. 5- If you want the songs on the cassette to be separate tracks on the CD, you will have to chop them up (That is another set of instructions, however easy to figure out). 6- When you have your tracks, burn them to a CD on your favorite CD burning program and enjoy!!.
The conversion will take place when recording the signal to tape - simply route the output from your computer (such as a speaker or headphone output) into the input of the cassette recorder, hit record and play on the cassette recorder and then play on your computer (or where ever your digital file is being played from).
THINGS YOU WILL NEED:* A Computer with sound* A 1/8" (3.5mm) stereo audio cable* Audacity Audio program (FREE)* Lame MP3 encoder (FREE)* Cassette player* Cassette TapeI found a very useful step-by-step guide on how and where to install audacity and lame. how to connect the cassette player to the computer and tips on how to record the audio. there are even pictures to explain everything better.
An audio cassette is a cassette containing audio data.
The real 'iPod' was first introduced in 2001, made by Apple. In 1979, Sony sold the 'Walkman', a portable audio player for cassette tapes. As in, Apple iPods are digital mp4 players for music and video, whereas the original Walkman played a single cassette at a time.
Similar only in the fact that both can be used to record audio. However, their underlying technology is totally different. A cassette records audio in an analog format while a CD records audio in a digital format.
No you cannot. A regular cassette player uses analog technology to pick up, analyse, convert and play analog sounds. DAT stands for Digital Audio Tape. DAT format is digital and uses 1s and 0s like a computer hard drive. The analog cassette will not be able to get any meaningful information from a DAT tape. So i need to buy a special DAT player to play DAT's?
- get a cassette player that plays the audio tape- route the output of the cassette player to your computer sound card- record the incoming audio with a recording software like Audacity or Reaper- save the audio as MP3 files and burn it to CD with a CD-burner software- You May Want To Remove The Noise In The Tracks, This Can Be Done With Audacity
An audio cassette has the music on it recorded in an analogue format, while a CD records information in a digital format. Thus in order to transfer the music from the cassette to the CD it is necessary to play the music on the cassette into a machine that will sample the sound and convert it into a numeric (digital) form, this is called analogue to digital conversion. It would be possible to build a machine to do this, but most of the 'off the shelf' technology to do this is now sold as computer components (boards to fit into a PC). Thus, depending on how many cassettes you want to transcribe you have two options # Use a company to do this for you (if you have only a few cassettes) # Go to a shop and purchase a PC - tell the store what you want to do and they will configure the PC for you (if you have a lot of cassettes) Look at the links I will place below
As audio cassette tapes are falling out of fashion the newest version of audio recording is all digital. It allows for greater storage. An individual kind find more information by going to the Sony audio webpage.
'Une cassette' can mean an audio-cassette or a small box of some kind
To copy a cassette to a CD requires either an audio recorder or computer with an audio input and CD burner. To use an audio recorder, connect your source cassette player to the device and place a blank writeable CD into the device. To use a computer, connect your source cassette player to the line in jack on the audio card and run audio recording software while the cassette is playing. Burn the audio files using the CD writer.
Yep