This is a complicated simple question;
How do you record a sound of something that is running on your computer? Ex; a game, musicfile, rom,...
How do you record a sound of it, and then convert it to .mid(i) ? :|
I've tryed of bending my mic and using Teamspeak/Ventrilo to record, but that didn't work out very well o.o
ID:185341
Feb 27 2006, 9:19 am
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If you have windows you don't need to download any extra programs, you can just use the standard windows recorder and go into the sound panel/menu to change the recording sounds of everything to the minimum and put the sterio mix (or mono, been a while since i've done it) up to the max and then you're away laughing.
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In response to Wanabe
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On Creative cards (like my SoundBlaster Live! Value), it's sometimes called "What U Hear". If you have one of those cards, just change the recording source to that (Audacity lets you do this quite easily - I'm not sure how to change it system-wide) and it should work fine.
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In response to Crispy
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Okay, and is there ANY means of converting those sounds to whatever type BYOND supports?
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In response to Mysame
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Of course!
In Audacity, when you've recorded your sound just go File->Export to OGG. Then select a filename and save in the usual Windows manner. That's it. |
In response to Crispy
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Wait, BYOND supports OGG?
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In response to Mysame
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It does now. As quoted in the announcements back in June...
BYOND can now play sounds and songs in the following formats: * Wave * Ogg Vorbis * MIDI * MOD * S3M * OXM * XM * IT * Raw |
In response to Sarm
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Yeah, provided you're using the beta version of course...
Audacity can also export to WAV if you want to support old BYOND clients, or for short audio files (like sound effects). |
Are there any programs out there that record what is coming through the speakers?
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In response to EGUY
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Uh, yes. Read the thread, that's exactly what it's about. =)
I know Audacity can, or you could check out the Total Recorder program that Worldweaver mentioned. I haven't used Total Recorder before, but I have used Audacity and I know it works. |
In response to Crispy
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How can Audacity do it? I've poked around the different options but didn't find anything interesting.
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In response to EGUY
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In the version of Audacity I have (1.2.3), there's a drop-down box next to the microphone volume at the top-right of the screen. By default it's set to "Microphone", but I can pull it down and change it to "What U Hear", which will cause Audacity to record whatever's coming out of the speakers.
"What U Hear" is only available on certain Creative sound cards, though; there should be a "Stereo Mix" or similar menu item if you have a different card. |
However, you can not save it as an midi, because that's not how midis work.