Gale Andrews wrote:I don't know but it would be very related to the capabilities of the PortAudio library we use for Audio I/O.
I can add your vote for such a feature in Audacity.
Gale
Hello Gale,
You definitely can add my vote for such a feature in Audacity.
An example would be:
If you did not hear something correctly, you could back up the cursor/progress bar into the recorded part of the sound stream and play it again.
Then have a "Real time" button to click which jumps the cursor/progress bar back to the beginning or to "Real time" recording.
This would be a very unique feature.
There are a lot people that would rather listen to the local radio broadcast and sync-up the audio with the digital television processing lag time.
DirecTv and Dish network DVR satellite receivers have what is called a "Live Buffer" that automatically and temporally stores up to 90 or 120 minutes of audio video on to the hard drive. If you change channels you lose the "Live Buffer" unless you save it to the hard drive.
For some reason no one has done this with a radio receiver. To do it you would have to convert the analog radio signal to digital, put it on the hard drive then convert it back to analog. Maybe its not feasible.
It not the recording feature that's the most important, its the ability (After you say to yourself) "What did they say" to go back into the live buffer and hear the sound bite again.That's the most important.
I don't think
http://www.totalrecorder.com/productfr_trPRO.htm should call it time shifting.
That implies recording and listening at a different time.
It should be called
Live Buffer Review or
Live Sound Stream Review or
Recorded Sound Stream Playback
Audacity would garner a lot attention with this feature.
The only question is how hard would it be to do?
Thanks For the Reply,
Vic