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0 users currently in Hardware / Software. |
User | Post |
Metal Man88 Posts: 689/701 |
Set the input for recording to whatever matches "What you hear" "Waveout" "Main Sound" etc, then fire up Sound Recorder. It's not fabulous and on cheap chipsets will be glitchy, but... it works! |
FreeDOS + Posts: 1282/1312 |
At worst, you can have a loopback with your sound card outputs. This would be of noticable low quality, but it works, and sometimes it's enough. |
Hiryuu Posts: 2437/2480 |
I think Ace and I are the only two that use GoldWave. Audacity seems to be the popular choice, but I'd rather have GW for what it's worth. |
BooUrns Posts: 444/450 |
Audacity would be my recommendation.
If you want to record any sound that comes out of your speakers, you'll have to make sure your sound card supports it / you have the correct drivers. I couldn't record the Wave Out Mix on my laptop when I first got it. I had to download different drivers for the sound card, then it worked fine. |
HyperHacker Posts: 5022/5072 |
Audacity does it well, and is free. |
Prince Kassad Posts: 318/321 |
You probably want dbPowerAmp Music Converter, which includes a sound recorder. |
Tanks Posts: 573/596 |
I need a program that can record any sounds that would come out of the speakers. I need to run it along w/ a screen record program. I don't want to use camtasia cause it doesn't record well on my computer so I think doing this is the only other way possible. |