Re: visually scan audio spectrum
Posted: Sun Mar 08, 2009 6:34 pm
We try to keep dialog on the forum so the most people possible can benefit.
In a word, no. Audacity doesn't do anything in real time except capture/record. Also, while Audacity will cheerfully try to record for hours, the requirements of the computer become onerous as to be unusable. We've had a number of postings like this: "My recording went toes up. How can I recover my 13-hour show from twenty-seven million temporary files?"
I don't know of anybody who ever did the research of what it would take to record a continuous, high quality stereo show for 24-hours.... Let's see. Put down the four and carry the one. Safety factor 10%...plus the UNDO buffers...Divide by...
I get about an 60GB hard drive on a machine that's not doing anything else. No internet, no email, no browsers, no virus checker, no firewall, and surgically clean and defragmented. I would certainly also, given a Windows machine, run a memory checker continuously for a day or so to make sure my machine has no instabilities whatsoever. Linux machines have the reputation of remaining stable for weeks, but not so Windows.
Mom? What does it mean when my screen turns blue with tiny white lettering on it?
http://oca.microsoft.com/en/windiag.asp
So those are the fuzzy, rough numbers--and that's assuming a very high quality, 48000, 16-bit, Stereo show for 24-hours. I don't know of anybody who's ever tried it for that long, but then I don't know anybody compulsive enough to prepare a machine like that, either.
Koz
In a word, no. Audacity doesn't do anything in real time except capture/record. Also, while Audacity will cheerfully try to record for hours, the requirements of the computer become onerous as to be unusable. We've had a number of postings like this: "My recording went toes up. How can I recover my 13-hour show from twenty-seven million temporary files?"
I don't know of anybody who ever did the research of what it would take to record a continuous, high quality stereo show for 24-hours.... Let's see. Put down the four and carry the one. Safety factor 10%...plus the UNDO buffers...Divide by...
I get about an 60GB hard drive on a machine that's not doing anything else. No internet, no email, no browsers, no virus checker, no firewall, and surgically clean and defragmented. I would certainly also, given a Windows machine, run a memory checker continuously for a day or so to make sure my machine has no instabilities whatsoever. Linux machines have the reputation of remaining stable for weeks, but not so Windows.
Mom? What does it mean when my screen turns blue with tiny white lettering on it?
http://oca.microsoft.com/en/windiag.asp
So those are the fuzzy, rough numbers--and that's assuming a very high quality, 48000, 16-bit, Stereo show for 24-hours. I don't know of anybody who's ever tried it for that long, but then I don't know anybody compulsive enough to prepare a machine like that, either.
Koz