| Most sound cards provide
the ability to receive sound input from
microphone, headphone and speaker ports.
This is useful for recording voice or sounds
to your computer.
1. Connect your microphone's cable to
your sound card's Mic In port at the back.
If you are not sure which port is correct,
you can check the sound card to see if
it is marked (sometimes with a picture
of a microphone), you can use a process
of elimination, check the documentation
that came with your hardware, or contact
the hardware manufacturer.
2. Launch All Sound Recorder XP ( version).
Click 'Browse' button to select or create
a destination sound file (.Mp3 or .Wav).
You can also use the default file shown
below the Browse button. Your recording
is automatically saved as this file.
3. Click Change Sound Source button to
call up its dialog to set recording devices.
Select Microphone and make sure the volume
slider is at least half way right. You
might see other devices, such as CD-Player
or Synthesizer (MIDI), etc in the recording
panel, uncheck all non-essential devices,
this cuts down background noise.
4. Click Record button and speak into
the microphone, you should see a wave
pattern display of the audio in recording
which indicates its volume. To adjust
the volume for the highest possible performance,
just move the Microphone's volume slider
to and fro.
You can pause the process of recording
by clicking the Pause button any time
you want and then resume it by clicking
the Resume button. When recording is complete,
click Stop button. The recording is the
destination sound file you selected.
Note: If your microphone has never worked,
or it stopped working, first check the
physical connection of the microphone.
Verify that it is firmly plugged into
the microphone port instead of the headphone
or speaker port.
5. For standard version user, to listen
to your recording, click Play button for
playback;
6. For version user, you can click Play&Edit
button to call up Sound Editor dialog
where you can play back and edit audio
files as you desire by cutting, copying,
pasting, trimming segments and employing
various DSP effects. The editing result
can be saved as .Mp3, .Wav, .Wma, .Ogg,
.Vqf files.
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