cellio: (avatar-face)
[personal profile] cellio
My google-fu is not good enough, it appears. Or rather, my vocabulary for this problem space isn't good enough to generate useful search terms.

Suppose I have some random application that generates sound -- that is, signal to my speakers -- but does not directly support any "save as" options for capturing that sound to disk. Is there any way, either built into Windows or done via freeware/cheapware, to capture that audio and write it to disk in some broadly-understood audio format, so that someone else can get the sound without running the original application?

Trope Trainer has a "play this torah portion" function, and one of my readers has asked for a recording of his portion. I'm looking for improvements on "hold a tape recorder up to the speaker", especially as I don't own a standard tape recorder. (I have one that uses micro-cassettes, but since the other person doesn't, that doesn't help.)

I'd welcome any hints y'all feel inclined to throw my way. Thanks.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-10-08 03:52 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] the-never.livejournal.com
Well, there used to be. I know because I used to use something like that to record from a crippled version of Rebirth that wouldn't save files. Let me look.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-10-08 03:58 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] the-never.livejournal.com
What kind of audio is it? Something like http://www.looprecorder.de/ can record web radio streams in various formats.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-10-08 04:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] laurabee.livejournal.com
You might be able to run a cable from audio out to the audio in on the same sound card. I'm not sure it would play nicely with itself, but it might work. Worst case, you can borrow someone else's laptop or computer and send the sounds to the other machine and record there.

I would assume there's something you're after, but my google-fu is lousy as well.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-10-08 08:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/tim_/
Depending on your sound card, you may be able to do this without any special programs at all. Try opening the sound recording volume (in the audio panel of the "sounds and audio device properties" control panel) and selecting Options->Properties. You may have a recording volume control listed for "wave out mix" or something like that; it's probably unchecked. That's the loopback feed that records from whathever the sound card is currently producing. If you check it, you'll get a new recording volume control; click the select checkbox for it to use it as the current recording source. Then you can use any audio recording tool.

If your sound card doesn't have any such facility (and you've turned on all the reasonably possible recording volume controls and checked that none of them produce anything useful), then Virtual Audio Cable (http://www.ntonyx.com/vac.htm) is probably what you want. One page (http://hauptwerk.co.uk/links.html) says it's the only such program they're aware of.

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