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#1
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![]() Somebody any brands that will allow recording internet radio on USB? There was DNT, or what was it called, also Sangean sometimes ... |
#2
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In article , marc writes:
Somebody any brands that will allow recording internet radio on USB? Is that Upper Sideband, or Universal Serial Bus? Obviously you can record to ordinary audio recording equipment anything that you can get out an audio port, and can use any USB device that converts to something your recording equipment can accept. But the best solutions would involve recording it directly to storage on the same computer that is receiving the broadcasts. Doesn't sound like something that would be left out of the receiving software. Does Media Player receive internet radio? Good chance it can record it, if so. On Linux there's something - JAX or Jacks, maybe? - I know very little about it, but it appears to allow patching from location A to location B within your system. Audacity is a general purpose recording and audio processing system. Between the two of them you may be able to tie in to an internet radio source. There was DNT, or what was it called, also Sangean sometimes ... Sounds like you need to give us more details so we can better respond. George |
#3
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In article , marc writes:
Somebody any brands that will allow recording internet radio on USB? There was DNT, or what was it called, also Sangean sometimes ... Since you did not respond to my comment that computer based internet radio software can probably record as well, I'll relate an experiment I am doing. I connected to a site I know about (auralmoon.com) via another usenet poster who volunteers some engineering services to them. It's billed as progressive rock but sounds pleasant enough. I'm afraid younger listeners might even consider it elevator music, but I like it. When I selected the highest free streaming speed (56kb mp3), it came up with a URL (http://auralmoon.com/playlinks/auralmoon56kmp3.pls) which I am guessing is a playlist file, and popped up a window for options of how to open it on my Windows 7 box. It includes Windows Media Center, I believe (didn't know I had that), but I tried VLC, a video player I use in other contexts. It just came up and started playing the audio stream [I noticed that the .pls file actually got saved on my hard drive in a temp directory, so VLC may be running now from a locally saved playlist]. I then looked around for ways to record. Under VLC's "audio" menu I found a red record button and was able to press it, but as far as I can tell it did nothing. That is, it never offered to open an output file at that time, and when I shut down and tried to exit, it never offered to save anything it might have recorded. There are plugins for VLC but I did not try to download any. And the Volume Mixer (right mouse option on the speaker icon in the taskbar) doesn't seem to do anything but vary the volume from the various sources (including this stream) out to the speakers. Playback is high quality, though. It's just that VLC under Windows 7 maybe don't have a way to route sound in realtime to a file. I'll look at other players, though, and update you. I suspect Real Media/Real Player would be a good choice, but do not believe I have it installed. George |
#4
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I wrote:
In article , marc writes: [...] With regard to my commitment to further investigate recording internet radio, I should mention that VLC with an external USB or non-USB audio recorder may just solve your problem outright. Here's what further investigation found, though: Windows Media Center (only installed on a system supplied by my employer) will not open the .pls file. It states that access is "denied by policy". Perhaps my employer does not want me listening to internet streams, and they certainly do not want me illegally recording them. Real Player is listed as being able to play all sorts of streaming formats - quite reasonable since that was one of their original claims to fame. In particular the can handle various playlist formats including .pls, according to their Wikipedia entry. I'm not going to download it though, because I don't have an anything near up-to-date Windows system at home. There's always the possibility it can record. Note that Linux has so many audio options it is just about impossible for me to sort through to find which have recording features. But there are distributions that focus on multimedia and might already have what you need installed and ready to use. If you do a search for "browser extensions to record streaming audio" you'll find various options. One of the first I ran into when I searched for Firefox extensions was called "Media Stealer", which, after all, is what the original question is likely about. At https://swen.antville.org/stories/735413/ I found this concerning VLC: "Videolan is one of the best media player around. It also has a feature to record a streamed file as a mp3 file." So maybe I just did not work at it hard enough when I tried it. Elsewhere on the page is a recommendation for the free Audacity product I mentioned earlier. In general, though, it is likely the reason recording options are somewhat difficult to find, or even nonexistent, in the high profile media players is that the developers do not want to be accused of aiding and abetting with regard to copyright violations. George |
#5
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ccrane.com Internet radio that records
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