kjodle wrote:
Better sound quality,
That's quite a common misconception (it's not true).
When recording a mono source (such as a microphone) as a mono track, the sound is written to disk once and creates a mono track.
When playing a mono track through stereo headphones or speakers, the audio is sent to both left and right speakers / ears.
When recording a mono source as a stereo track, the signal is duplicated and written to disk twice to create a 2 channel track. The two channels are identical, and it is still a "mono" recording (sometimes referred to as "dual mono").
When playing a 2 channel mono recording (dual mono), one track channel is sent to one ear / speaker, and the other track channel is sent to the other. Thus the sound is
identical to playing a single channel mono track, except that the file size is bigger and the computer has to work a little harder because there is twice as much data.
When saving audio in a compressed format (such as MP3 or OGG), the data compression reduces the file size at the expense of sound quality. Higher compression settings produce smaller files at the expense of lower sound quality, thus there is a trade off between file size and sound quality. When saving a "dual mono" recording in a compressed format, there is more data to be saved, so either the file size will be bigger for the same sound quality, or the sound quality will be worse for the same file size, compared to a normal (single channel) mono recording. Thus, when saving a mono recording in a compressed format, it is significantly better to use single track mono.
The
only benefit to recording a mono source as a 2 channel (stereo) track is if you intend to apply a stereo effect (such as "ping-pong echo"). In all other cases it is better to record a mono source as a single channel mono track.
kjodle wrote:deviceinfo.txt
This file shows which devices Audacity can "see". Your headset is only listed as a playback device (the headphones) and not as a recording device (the microphone).
One common reason for a headset mic to not show up, is if it is being used by another application ("exclusive access").
Ensure that there are no audio applications enabled for start-up on log-in (for example, Skype will start automatically by default), reboot your computer, start Audacity (before
any other program), and get the "Audio Device Info" again. We're looking for "Logitech USB" to be listed as a recording device.