new person looking for help

Help for Audacity on Windows.
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ImageThis forum is for Audacity on Windows.
Please state which version of Windows you are using,
and the exact three-section version number of Audacity from "Help menu > About Audacity".


Audacity 1.2.x and 1.3.x are obsolete and no longer supported. If you still have those versions, please upgrade at https://www.audacityteam.org/download/.
The old forums for those versions are now closed, but you can still read the archives of the 1.2.x and 1.3.x forums.
earlgrey
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new person looking for help

Post by earlgrey » Mon Sep 24, 2012 11:18 pm

thanks. When I try to go to the manual I get a message like 'you need translators in Wiki'. What the heck do I do to get the translators. All I want to do is input some cassettes and output to CDs. Is there a better place to view how to set up Audacity?

thanks

steve
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Re: new person looking for help

Post by steve » Mon Sep 24, 2012 11:59 pm

If you look in the Audacity "Help menu > Manual" the Audacity manual should appear in your web browser (in English).
9/10 questions are answered in the FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (FAQ)

waxcylinder
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Re: new person looking for help

Post by waxcylinder » Tue Sep 25, 2012 9:03 am

The message at the top of the manual does indeed say "Translators are urgently required... To help translate this Manual to other languages, please write to our feedback address for an account on this Wiki. "

This is merely an appeal to any bilingual/multi-lingual users who have some spare time and who would care to contribute to this open-source project to help us make translations of the documentation into various languages so that it is easier to use for folk for whom English is not their first language. If you do not fall into that category - then please ignore the message and just read the manual.

WC
________________________________________FOR INSTANT HELP: (Click on Link below)
* * * * * FAQ * * * * * Tutorials * * * * * Audacity Manual * * * * *

waxcylinder
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Re: new person looking for help

Post by waxcylinder » Tue Sep 25, 2012 9:04 am

And for help on digitizing tapes to CDs see this set of tutorials in the manual: http://manual.audacityteam.org/o/man/tu ... to_cd.html

WC
________________________________________FOR INSTANT HELP: (Click on Link below)
* * * * * FAQ * * * * * Tutorials * * * * * Audacity Manual * * * * *

earlgrey
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Re: new person looking for help

Post by earlgrey » Tue Sep 25, 2012 3:00 pm

thank you steve and waxcylinder. I'm impressed with how helpful this group is. With a little help, I hope to be up to speed on this in a short time. The number of settings and buttons on Audacity are a bit scary. Any thoughts on how I should set it up to copy from cassette story books to computer and then burn a CD? For example, how many minutes will a standard CD hold with standard settings, what are standard settings for this operation? I hope the manual and demo will tell me this sort of stuff.

steve
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Re: new person looking for help

Post by steve » Tue Sep 25, 2012 3:09 pm

earlgrey wrote:how many minutes will a standard CD hold
72 minutes, though personally I try to avoid filling them to maximum capacity because the last few minutes are most likely to mess up (they are right near the edge where it is most likely to get knocked and scratched).

Audacity does not burn CDs.
To make a CD, prepare the tracks in Audacity and export as WAV files, then use a CD burning program (such as Nero [commercial] or CDBurnerXP [free]) to create a CD from the WAV files. (Important tip: If you want the CD to play on a normal CD player, make sure you tell the CD burning program to make an "audio" CD and not a "data" CD).

Details are in the link that waxcylinder posted.
9/10 questions are answered in the FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (FAQ)

earlgrey
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Re: new person looking for help

Post by earlgrey » Tue Sep 25, 2012 6:08 pm

thanks again. I wish I could repay the favor but my only expertise is in trading stocks, training dogs, and I still know a bit about the old DOS. IOW, I may be limited in technology knowledge but at least I love to listen to audio books.

thor21344
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Re: new person looking for help

Post by thor21344 » Wed Sep 26, 2012 3:14 am

You can also use Win Media Player to RIP the wav file to a WMA file and put on as much as 16 hours, I have a CD that i made for road trips that is 16 hours long and i still have another 3 0r 4 hour left.

But as Steve says, do not fill it up all of the way

Once you export to a wav file you then burn to a rewritable CD, then use window media player to RIP to WMA and then burn them files to another write-only CD for yourlistening pleasure.

And you do not have to be an Audacity guru to help out, i deffently am not one but i do get a hit once in a while, but if you keep readding then you learn more, i love computers and forums, you can learn so much and you meet the nicest people on the forum ,

Then you get some one like me that gets diariea of the fingers and don't know when to shut up

hope this helps

Marty

steve
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Re: new person looking for help

Post by steve » Wed Sep 26, 2012 4:06 am

thor21344 wrote:You can also use Win Media Player to RIP the wav file to a WMA file and put on as much as 16 hours, I have a CD that i made for road trips that is 16 hours long and i still have another 3 0r 4 hour left.
but most standalone CD players will not be able to play it. "Standard" audio CDs use uncompressed PCM data, 16 bit, 44.1 kHz (see Red Book Standard: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Book_%28CD_standard%29 )

The red book specification states 79.8 minutes, but most CD-Rs (writeable CDs) have smaller capacity (around 72 minutes). The so called "80 minute" CD-Rs will manage roughly 80 minutes, though as I said previously I don't like to push them on capacity.

The standard that specifically applies to CD-R's is the Orange Book standard: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CD-R
9/10 questions are answered in the FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (FAQ)

thor21344
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Re: new person looking for help

Post by thor21344 » Wed Sep 26, 2012 5:44 pm

but most standalone CD players will not be able to play it. "Standard" audio CDs use uncompressed PCM data, 16 bit, 44.1 kHz (see Red Book Standard: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Book_%28CD_standard%29 )
On this one i respectivly disagree with you Steve, as i have stated various times i am not a sound expert like you and the other moderators are, but, on this one I have found out that any CD Player that will play MP3 (Standard now) will play the WMA. I have several CD Player in my house and in my car and truck, they all play the WMA CD's.

Marty

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