Kevin, I think I saw some article somewhere about a recent increase in spam volume. The newest thing is sending a .GIF file with the spam ad in it, with a bunch of text that is designed to be random enough to not trigger the spam-blocking parser.
Buffistechnology 2: You Made Her So She Growls?
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Yeah, I've noticed that for about 6 months, but over the last few days it seems to have gone crazy here. We block about 10,000 or so a day spam messages at work at the moment.
There's always more advertising during the holiday season... ;)
Oh, about that connecting the turntable to the computer thing -- my turntable is from the late 80s and my computer is from this year. I have a feeling the input/output stuff won't work -- are there adapters for that sort of thing?
Has anybody else noticed an increase in spam recently?
Err, sorry, this is my fault. All the spam in the world is being sent from my domain. Sorry about that.
are there adapters for that sort of thing?
Most likely.
Oh, about that connecting the turntable to the computer thing -- my turntable is from the late 80s and my computer is from this year. I have a feeling the input/output stuff won't work -- are there adapters for that sort of thing?
Read my post above, Sumi. Do you have a receiver you can plug the turntable into like how you would normally play a record? Does the receiver also have "record" and "play" rca jacks for connecting a tape deck? If so, you can use my method above.
The big thing when dealing with a phonograph is that you need some piece of gear with a Phono preamp in it. This can usually be a receiver like Jon is describing, though newer ones don't always have a phono input on them. You need to make sure that it is specifically a phono input for two reasons, one is that a turntable puts out a different level than other components and also because there is a equalization curve on those inputs that is needed. Basically certain frequencies are boosted or cut in the mastering process for vinyl and those must be compensated for with a specific EQ curve on the phono input. You can get a standalone phono preamp as well, here is a site with a selection of them.
I have a receiver - (completely blocked from view) I believe that it's set up to have a cassette player or at least something aux connected to it too so I should be able to follow Jon's method.
And I've marked all relevant posts for future reference. Thank you so much! It will be so m uch fun and much cheaper to convert records to mpgs and then burn them rather than buying more cds.
We are 40 posts away from a new tech thread. I've just proposed these early ideas in the bureaucraxy thread Daniel C. Jensen "Bureaucracy 3: Oh, so now you want to be part of the SOLUTION?" Dec 30, 2006 9:15:09 pm PST:
Buffistechnology3: clocking a pretty scary amount of computer time.
Buffistechnology3: I'm jacked in, I'm jacked in, I'm jacked in...
Buffistechnology3: Technopagan is the term.
Buffistechnology3: It's the computer age; nerds are in.
All from "I Robot, You Jane," so far.
It will be so much fun and much cheaper to convert records to mpgs and then burn them rather than buying more cds.
If you want to digitize your LPs specifically to convert to CDs, then you should save them as .wav files (or .aiff on the Mac) when you record, and not mpegs. Mpegs, especially mp3s, are a "lossy" format, which means you'll lose fidelity in the process of making the CD. Wav and aiff files are not lossy. They will take up more space on your hard disk, but if you're just burning them to a CD and then deleting the files, size won't matter.