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405 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 131
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Title: HPR0131: Adding Stereo to a Computer
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0131/hpr0131.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 11:54:43
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---
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Well, that's not very, very good. That's standard generic default for music.
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But that isn't-
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Standard called for what we would call 384 kilobits per second.
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But, you know, people discovered that 128 sounded pretty good and was much smaller.
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So that's kind of where 128 comes from when it comes to music.
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That's what, to most people, sounds okay.
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Anybody who's an audio file, you know, who are one of the most unhappy people on the face of the earth,
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they don't like it.
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Today on Hack a public radio, I think a stereo to your computer.
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It's me DeepGeek. Stick with us.
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We'll be right back.
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So, okay, that intro was actually a sound clip of Stank and Jason Scott.
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And Ben rev number 59, which is the sound formats episode.
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I thought it was such a great idea to do as an intro for my stereo adding project.
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Because, you know, the way he said that and the way Stank giggled, you know,
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you know, audio files who are some of the most unhappy people in the world.
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You know, I mean, I'm not an audio file.
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But, you know, I kind of admire the people who did the podcast thing before me.
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And it's going to take me a while to, like, even approach the number of episodes others have done.
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So I figured, well, I'm going to be here a while.
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So, if I'm going to be, you know, listening to these podcasts before I send them out,
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I want to hear what they really sound like.
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So, I pursued a little search for better fidelity.
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But no, no.
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I didn't go out and, like, you know, spend a billion dollars on a home studio.
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I didn't go that far.
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But, I thought you might want to hear my story first.
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So, let me tell you a little story about how this thing got started.
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You know, I told you my motivation.
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But, so, I decide, you know, instead of using the little crappy desktop speakers,
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I'm going to run over to my big stereo.
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And my big stereo is one of those all-in-one things.
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You know, you know the deal, right?
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It's like a 5 CD changer. It's two tape decks.
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You know, an all-in-one thing from Sony.
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You know, it was a favorite company.
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So, I go to radio shack. I buy these cables.
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Plug in the back of my sound.
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And my motherboard sounds jack over.
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I go.
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Click play, and that's some music I was familiar with.
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Guess what?
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It sounded like shit.
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I couldn't believe it.
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I couldn't believe my ears.
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So, you got to imagine me, you know,
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strul over the box.
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And so, I turn on the desktop speakers.
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And I pull the plug out and I'm putting in the desktop speakers and they sound better.
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So, I'm like, wait, this is wrong.
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The good stereo is supposed to sound better than the shitty computer speakers.
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It cost me 20 bucks. I felt, you know, oh, it's horrible.
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And it's just started a whole thing with me because it was just unacceptable.
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So, what I'm going to tell you about today is, you know, how I overcame that.
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And I got, you know, what I think is the ideal sound for me.
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Now, I want to say sounds a personal thing.
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So, like, I was going to be from my point of view on what I think is good.
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And I would love nothing more than not being the last contributor to HPR
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to talk about doing something like this.
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Because what I think is good for me, I like to hear people who did something else.
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And why they think there's as better than what I did.
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Or why there's as better for them than how come mine is better for mine.
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You know what I mean?
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So, that's where I hope it goes.
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I'm going to tell you how I did it, why did it, what I think about it.
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And I really hope someone, you know, disagrees and makes another episode of Pack of Public Radio.
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And I'll get another perspective. I think that would be cool.
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So, what was up with those four whistles?
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Yeah, I thought instead of just, you know, starting by talking about, like, frequency.
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I thought I'd give you a little demonstration.
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Now, think about the whistles I just played for you.
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Now, the first one you could probably hear fine.
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And they got higher and higher in pitch.
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And either depending on your age, you heard the sound from Fainter and Fainter.
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Or you didn't hear the last one completely.
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So, if you're wondering what these whistles were, well, I'll give you a hint.
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If you have a dog or cat in the room in there, it is picked up.
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I was just tuning on a dog trainer whistle.
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You know, most fun three bucks I was spent in the pet store in my life.
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You know, you know, call the cat dog for dinner, whatever.
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But, you know, I, like, any do dad does something where I'm in for.
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Anyway, so, the reason I had this for an introduction to those sounds is because, you know, I want to talk about,
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I told you the story about this old stereo sounding bad.
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But the question becomes, you know, how do we know what's going to sound good before we buy it?
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And we have to measure sound quality in some way.
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And we're geeks, right?
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We're hackers, we're computer guys, we want to call it.
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So, we use numbers.
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So, those numbers, you know, get higher and higher.
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Now, a human drops off at 20,000 hertz.
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And if you Google comparison frequency hearing different animals,
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you'll have some interesting reading I show you.
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So, like I said in my story, my stereo didn't sound so good.
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I knew it wasn't playing back, right, right.
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I didn't know why.
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So, what did I do?
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Well, I went to the internet, I began reading around.
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And I found this really, really interesting metric.
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It's called harmonic distortion.
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And I actually found that there's the tests that the people who make the stereo do
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and those people who check up on them by doing their own tests.
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And so, you can actually go with a piece of hardware that reproduces sound onto the internet
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and Google, you know, that device and harmonic distortion.
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And you can see the number and what I found out was that clock radios have a harmonic distortion
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or an error of about 10%.
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And guess what?
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So, did my Sony all-in-one stereo.
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So, that was really interesting.
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And I also found out, when you look at stereos,
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that if you go to, if you use a website, like I know I kind of like a radio check guy.
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So, I looked at radio checks website and they had statistics right there on the site for all the equipment.
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So, if I'm reading in the specs and they tell you, you know,
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the reproduction was tested for up to 20,000 hertz, some say up to 24,000 hertz.
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Now, there's no point in you spending your hard-and-earned money.
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Buying a stereo system that's going to reproduce perfectly stuff only your pets can hear.
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That would not make sense.
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That's one of the reasons why I thought that intro quote with audio files are naturally unhappy people was interesting.
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So, you know, harmonic distortion.
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So, I found out that my stereo had the same as a clock radio, which is not good.
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Now, I also googled around different sound cards.
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And you can get that for different sound cards.
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Now, we're talking about something between one-half and one percent with different sound cards.
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So, the lower you get, the closer to 0.09 you get, the more expensive the equipment gets.
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But, I just want to sound, you know, I'm a guy who likes a little bit better.
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I don't need to be perfect, you know.
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So, I said, well, if I could get under 1 percent, I could be happy.
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So, what I did was I said, well, I'm going to buy a stereo and plug the stereo into the computer.
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And, you know, I want to go a little bit later about why I said I'll buy a stereo.
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So, I want to read your check.
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I looked at different ones.
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I picked essentially a receiver that was on sale.
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I knew enough to look up the homework distortion.
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The frequencies it could play back.
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It was nice.
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So, I bought it.
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I bought a couple of desktop speakers, which are bigger.
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No, not desktop speakers.
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I bought a couple of bookshelf speakers, which are much bigger than desktop speakers.
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And I bought the cables.
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Heard it all together.
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And I got really, really nice sound out of it.
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So, what's it like, you know, connecting the computer to the stereo?
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Well, the arrangement is too complex.
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It's basically four parts involved.
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You get them at your radio check store.
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You know, there's an extension for what's called the RCA cables,
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which the stereo is looking for for input.
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And those are a male male extender.
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And there's two pairs of wires joined that make a trunk that go to the other end of the extension.
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So, you need that.
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And then there is this Y-shaped set of wires that actually plug into the mini jack on the back of your computer.
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And they come out with two RCA jacks.
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And the RCA jacks these come out in.
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Or males also.
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So, they just need these two little round things.
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They're female to female converters.
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And you plug them all together.
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And you hook it into the back.
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And then you push OX on the selector.
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You power, you know, you power it on.
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You push OX on the selector.
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You adjust your value.
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You've been playing it.
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Sounds great.
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Now, before I talk to you about what you can do with a,
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when you use a computer as a stereo,
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because the vista you will have of things you can do with a Linux-based computer being your stereo,
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is much different than just buying a stereo.
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But before I get into that, you know,
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I want to go into some of the logic that drove some of the decisions as I made.
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Now, you might notice that, you know, I plugged in to my computer.
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I didn't talk about the intermediate step of buying a sound card.
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Maybe I should buy a sound card.
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I don't know.
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The output sounds pretty good to me.
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Like I said, you know, younger people might have different perceptions of sound.
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So I thought it would be, you know, a little bit wasteful to buy it.
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A sound card, because the onboard sound seems to be performing fine.
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I'd love to hear other people talk about whether or not sound card or not to get a separate sound card.
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The last I heard of it was in the old binary revolution radios.
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And those were a while back.
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And I do believe that the motherboard onboard sounds,
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sound systems have improved a lot over the past five years.
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I heard that.
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So I still think it sounds better than my old stereo,
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because I'm coming from the old one stereo to a real stereo.
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So it sounds good to me.
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I don't know.
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Like I said, I'm also feeling out hoping another HPR recorder will answer me back in a way,
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and give me more information.
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Maybe make me go show me how I can go even further.
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So, you know, I decided to stick with motherboard.
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I did look around now.
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I have an Nvidia chipset motherboard with an AMD based computer on it.
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So I didn't find my specific motherboard listed,
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Googling for harmonic distortion,
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but most of the Nvidia's had that statistic harmonic distortion under one.
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So I thought it was pretty good.
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Now, the other thing I decided against that I noticed was that a lot of people were going to five channel.
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Now, when I get music, typically I either convert a CD I already have
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by bar or CD from a front of the library, and I convert.
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So my master, the CD, is two channel.
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You know, I don't see the point of getting the five channel,
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because the stuff I listen to is going to be two channel.
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And I kind of looked around the web, and it looks like,
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but I'm not sure how it works, but it looks like it's a computer simulation of what five sound,
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a electronically generates five channels from a two channel input.
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Maybe I'm wrong.
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I thought stereo was just fine.
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As far as having multiple speakers, my receiver has outputs for two sets of speakers.
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Marked A and B, so if I ever want to surround, I can get another pair of speakers,
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put them behind me, and put speaker B, run all four speakers at the same time.
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So that was another decision I want to make.
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Alright, when I come back, let's talk about what you can do with a computer for a stereo.
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Acre public radio is community radio.
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Please consider recording your own episodes.
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We always love to have more material,
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and our administration will be most helpful in getting you out there.
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Hey, it's Steve Geek.
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Thanks for sticking with me for so long.
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And I want this to be a good episode.
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I want to get into some detail with you guys.
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So one of the things that intrigued me was the concept of doing more
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with a computer and a stereo than just a stereo.
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What do I mean by that?
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Well, think about a stereo, right?
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You know, you push FM, you listen to the radio.
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You pop a CD, you listen to a CD, you pop a cassette, you do a cassette.
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Maybe you record a cassette.
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Maybe you mix up your own music and make a mix tape.
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Okay, and that's kind of the extent of it.
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But you know, for the past five years now,
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I've been downloading a lot of internet talk shows.
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As you all know, I've been downloading music, you know,
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free samples, whatnot,
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barring things from a library, converting them, you know.
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When I started listening to podcasts,
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I used to convert the podcast into a CD,
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put it into my car for the CD in the car stereo
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and listen to the CD of the podcast.
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Now, I just load that file into my Cowan digital media player,
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put on headphones in the car and drive all over the place.
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So it changes, but the point is you get more digital.
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So, some things beckon.
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And one of the things that really beckoned
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was the fact of having the high quality for music,
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as well as when I get to download Japanese animation
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or TV shows on the internet.
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It sounds so much better when I watch video now,
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because I pump the video through the big speakers,
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makes a hell of a difference.
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So that's one thing you can do,
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is that you become a truly multimedia PC,
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you know, and the kind of computer accessories you get,
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like I said, my desktop speakers for the computer,
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which will create a lab's make,
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were better than the Yolan 1 stereo,
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but still there's something about a bigger speaker.
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I don't mean the case of the speaker,
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I mean the actual speaker.
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I replaced the earbuds for my Cow and I River,
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with the biggest headphones I could find,
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and it sounds that much better.
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Conversely, I found out this can get you in a little bit of trouble.
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I actually, you know, made a poor sound quality recording,
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you know, and it sounded good on my big bookshelf speakers.
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When I got onto the headphones,
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it sounded like crap.
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So I went the other way.
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So there's something about the big speaker that adds to everything.
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Now, since I'm playing podcasts,
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since I'm playing download stuff,
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now I don't have to convert to something if I don't want to.
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Now, Linux does all kinds of things with multimedia.
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We all know about what a wave file is.
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We all know what an MP3 is.
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A lot of us know where an object is,
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and a lot of us know what a flack file is.
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Well, now I'm going to public libraries,
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get music I like, converting it into flacks.
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And flacks, maybe you get twice as much in the same space.
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Now, I don't know any stereo I can play a flack on.
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I don't want to confine myself to my portable digital media player.
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So now I'm basically playing flacks for almost all my music.
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And I'm getting a lot more music.
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And another thing that's interesting is once I began listening to flacks,
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my disk drive began filling up.
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But did I sweat?
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No, because I had all the options of the computer at my disposal.
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So what I began doing was I began moving them from the disk to CDs and DVDs.
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Now, it's pretty cool to get two CDs onto a data CD with the flack files.
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The free lossless audio code make sure that I don't lose any original data.
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Not that that would be a big deal.
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High quality MP3 would certainly have enough sound that you'd barely notice.
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But when you begin instead of using CDs and begin moving files to DVDs,
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it gets the file management gets a little hairy.
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So, you know, you do create a DVD just like a CD.
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But the density of the DVD is so much greater than the CD.
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I took all my Mozart, a bunch of other, all my Beethoven,
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a few other random classical CDs,
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converted them to flacks from all in one DVD.
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It was like 16 CDs to one DVD.
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So, what I had to do was,
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is we limit myself to four different artists per DVD.
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So, you know, you don't have to go hog wild with compression just because you have it.
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You still have to manage it and be able to look at something and say,
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oh, my Beethoven and my Mozart, if you list like 50 or 60 artists on one CD pop,
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you know, it's going to be a little inconvenient for you.
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So, I began using that, then it would mount the CD or DVD,
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kick off XMMS, and set the stereo,
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and go to bed like that, you know, with the stereo playing.
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It's cool, you know.
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One thing I did was I used the shutdown command to turn off the stereo automatically.
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So, if I had to say 90 minutes of music,
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I would do shutdown space dash H,
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space plus 90,
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and 90 minutes, the computer would shut down.
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Well, another session was playing the music,
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and I would also hit the timer on the stereo.
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So, that's cool.
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And what else is cool about that is, as you know,
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I recently did an episode, a short episode on batch processing.
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I could kick off a few batches to run in that 90 minutes,
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have the stereo going, turn off the screen,
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hit the sack, fall asleep gently with music playing in the background,
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and come back to it all in the morning.
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We might email to see what my batch files did.
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What could be better than that?
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Well, before going into the gig tidbit for the day,
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I'd like to wrap up by telling you all what I'd like to find out about,
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what I don't know about,
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and perhaps we'll be fodder for future HPR episodes.
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I'd like to know about receiving streaming.
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All right, now Linux has a few players that receive streams,
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but I noticed that a lot of the commercial radio stations
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kind of do this.
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I don't know.
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They send it to a web page that only works with Internet Explorer.
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So, I'd like to know how to get around that.
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I think that'd be something cool to know about.
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It's a know about what the 5.1 channel sound experience is like.
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As a person who's interested in stereo classical jazz rock,
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is anything being recorded for that format?
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This is something I don't know.
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So, I'd like to hear about those things.
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Today's gig tidbit,
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converting waves to MP3s,
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making your file smaller by using variable bit rate.
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Now, we all know when we record on the computer,
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we normally say either use the command line recording program,
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such as A record, which is short for also record,
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also being the advanced Linux sound architecture,
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or perhaps we record an audacity.
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Normally, a lot of people edit an audacity,
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and audacity has a built-in function,
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where if you have WAME in your computer,
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it will make an MP3 for you.
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You do export as MP3,
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and in your preferences, you can set, say,
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most people leave it safely default for 128 kilobits per second.
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Now, as far as I know,
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there's no way of doing variable bit rate MP3s.
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Now, variable bit rate is interesting,
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because if you record that one same file
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as 128 kilobits per second, variable bit rate,
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it'll only be in that mode of 128 kilobits per second,
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when it needs to.
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When you have less busy sound or quiet,
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it'll drop down to a lower bit rate for those sections,
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and this can save significantly significant space,
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significant file size on the MP3s you create.
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So, if you want to save some space,
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and that sacrifice a lot of quality,
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or perhaps you want to use a higher bit rate,
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and have it be a variable,
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and make it so that you have a variable bit rate
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at a higher bit rate for the complex sections,
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and a little bit rate for the regular stuff,
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and have it be the same size as a lower quality MP3
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you'd make with, say, 128 kilobits per second fixed bit rate.
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You might want to explore using LAME
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with the variable bit rate option,
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dash VBR or dash VBR dash new.
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That's been today's kicktipit.
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Thanks for listening to Hack a Public Radio.
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Have a great day.
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Thanks for watching.
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Thanks for watching.
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Thanks for watching.
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Thanks for watching.
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Thanks for watching.
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Thanks for watching.
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Thanks for watching.
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That was Track No. 11, from the album Big Dipper by Drop Trio from Magnetune.com.
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Thank you for listening to Hack a Public Radio.
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Thanks for listening to Hack a Public Radio.
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Thanks for listening to Hack a Public Radio.
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