I NEED HELP WITH MY PODCAST!!!!! PLEASE READ! - Classroom 2.02024-03-29T07:10:57Zhttps://www.classroom20.com/forum/topics/649749:Topic:171743?feed=yes&xn_auth=noUSB is better than the standa…tag:www.classroom20.com,2008-08-01:649749:Comment:1720572008-08-01T15:11:16.135ZSteve O'Connorhttps://www.classroom20.com/profile/SteveOConnor
USB is better than the standard mic port in most cases and is probably good enough. There are higher quality USB Mics that are in the $50-$100 range--check reviews. Alternatively, you can buy are regular microphone with an XLR connector (~$100, but you can spend much, much more) which necessitates a sound board or a special audio card. A simple sound board can be has for well under $100. They connect to the computer via USB or better yet, firewire.<br />
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I am pretty happy with my Plantronics DSP 400…
USB is better than the standard mic port in most cases and is probably good enough. There are higher quality USB Mics that are in the $50-$100 range--check reviews. Alternatively, you can buy are regular microphone with an XLR connector (~$100, but you can spend much, much more) which necessitates a sound board or a special audio card. A simple sound board can be has for well under $100. They connect to the computer via USB or better yet, firewire.<br />
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I am pretty happy with my Plantronics DSP 400 which goes for about $40. In general, I found Plantronics better than LogiTech, but that is anecdotal. If u are using a Mac use Gara…tag:www.classroom20.com,2008-08-01:649749:Comment:1719952008-08-01T12:56:53.733ZDavid Kapulerhttps://www.classroom20.com/profile/dkapuler
If u are using a Mac use Garageband to do your podcast. You can adjust your audio levels on there as well and a USB Microphone would be your best bet.
If u are using a Mac use Garageband to do your podcast. You can adjust your audio levels on there as well and a USB Microphone would be your best bet. I downloaded episode 3. The s…tag:www.classroom20.com,2008-08-01:649749:Comment:1719922008-08-01T12:54:14.029Znlowellhttps://www.classroom20.com/profile/nlowell
I downloaded episode 3. The sound quality on this isn't terrible, but there are some things you can do to make it better.<br />
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Headset mics are a sometimes thing. You can maximize their sound quality by<br />
- turning off "noise suppression" (if it has it)<br />
- position the boom so that the mic is just about level with the tip of your nose<br />
- don't touch it while you're recording<br />
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This sounds like you're recording at too high a level. While this mp3 file doesn't appear to be clipping -- that's when it chops…
I downloaded episode 3. The sound quality on this isn't terrible, but there are some things you can do to make it better.<br />
<br />
Headset mics are a sometimes thing. You can maximize their sound quality by<br />
- turning off "noise suppression" (if it has it)<br />
- position the boom so that the mic is just about level with the tip of your nose<br />
- don't touch it while you're recording<br />
<br />
This sounds like you're recording at too high a level. While this mp3 file doesn't appear to be clipping -- that's when it chops off the loudest sounds -- the waveform LOOKS like you used Audacity's Normalize filter. That takes the clipping out of the output file, but leaves the noise that clipping causes.<br />
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Try cranking the gain back a bit to make sure it's not clipping . In Audacity you can tell if it clips by the little red band that appears in the meter.<br />
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Of course, recording at a low level creates another problem and that's having too weak a signal. You can fix that by creating a .wav file of your voice track and running that through a tool called Levelator (<a href="http://www.conversationsnetwork.org/levelator">http://www.conversationsnetwork.org/levelator</a> )<br />
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Then you can bring the output.wav file back into Audacity and mix the intro music, etc.<br />
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It also sounds like you didn't do *any* post production on this to do things like take out mis-speaks, clip out the 'um's or remove the lip clicks and smacks. You'll sound a lot better if you pay attention to those.<br />
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Oh, and if you save the audio *before* you render the final MP3 version, *always* save a .wav file version along with the .aup file. Use that .aup or .wav file to resume editing. Do NOT re-load the MP3 and edit that unless you have absolutely no choice. The MP3 file is a "lossy" format -- like jpeg for images -- and it throws away some information with each new save. (This is the bitter voice of experience talking.)<br />
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Finally, check out <a href="http://gangplankhq.com/">Gangplank</a> there in Phoenix. I know a lot of those people and they'd be happy to help. I am currently an intern at W…tag:www.classroom20.com,2008-08-01:649749:Comment:1719412008-08-01T10:21:02.722ZColette Cassinellihttps://www.classroom20.com/profile/ccassinelli
I am currently an intern at Webcast Academy and am learning how to record interviews using Skype and Audacity. You don't need to learn the streaming section but check out the directions using a USB mic at their website (for Windows): <a href="http://www.webcastacademy.net/book/webcasting-overview-windows">http://www.webcastacademy.net/book/webcasting-overview-windows</a>
I am currently an intern at Webcast Academy and am learning how to record interviews using Skype and Audacity. You don't need to learn the streaming section but check out the directions using a USB mic at their website (for Windows): <a href="http://www.webcastacademy.net/book/webcasting-overview-windows">http://www.webcastacademy.net/book/webcasting-overview-windows</a>