annemarie wrote:1. I have used the line-in feed with other sources (both music and speech audio-cassettes hooked up from their audio out to laptop) and it worked fine.
So the hardware works ok.
annemarie wrote:2. I have used another software - DC Millenium -- to try and extract audio from my videocassette and that worked but the sound quality was not good.
So the videocassette works, but the sound quality is not great. I can tell from the "good" part of your sound clip that the sound quality is poor - you're not going to make it sound wonderful, even with Audacity, but it should be good enough to hear what is being said.
annemarie wrote:3. I think that maybe my new virus protector has to be shut down...and I will try that next.
Shutting down your antivirus is a very good idea (also shut down your internet so as not to leave your computer vulnerable - best to be on the safe side). If your "new virus protector" is AVG7, then I'm surprised that it's causing a problem, unless it starts doing a scheduled scan. If it starts scanning your system, then you can be certain that recording without drop-outs will be impossible.
For future reference, could you post exactly what your anti-virus program is, and if disabling it solves the problem.
I am using AVG 7.5.503 FREE and I have no problem. I only have the anti-virus installed - not the anti-spyware, or the internet security suite.
annemarie wrote:4. I will try another software and hope for better results.
For completely free audio editing software, I think Audacity is the best there is - the more I use it and the more I get to know it, the more I like it. If the problem is being caused by an anti-virus program scanning your hard drive, you will almost certainly get the same problem with other software. With audio recording, the data has to be written to disk pretty quick, and that can't happen if the disk is being heavily used by another application.
annemarie wrote: I thought that going directly from source to an audio file would give me better results than going from source through TV to DVD rather than DVD to audio
If you mean, as the alternative, going from source to a DVD recorder, then ripping the audio from the DVD - that should give very good results (depending on the quality of the source material, which in this case is not that great). DVD recorders usually have half decent audio in, and half decent A/D converters (in some cases they can be very good indeed) and ripping the audio from the DVD should be very close to perfect.
Recording directly from the source into your computer should also be very good, as long as you have a decent quality sound card. If your sound card only has a "mic in" and no "line in", then the quality will not be so good.
annemarie wrote:Any other suggestions? Maybe for another software?
I think that shutting down the anti-virus will fix it.
I'd recommend sticking with Audacity for a while (assuming we've fixed the problem) - get to know it, get to love it. (btw, I'm not in any way connected to the Audacity project, I'm just an enthusiastic user).
annemarie wrote:By the way, my cut out seems to be less than 2 min....maybe about 30 secs.
You've not said if you've tried this more than once, and if the "cut out" happens at the same place each time. In the event that switching off your anti-virus does not cure the problem, this information could be important.
Good luck.