You can get an adapter (walmart, radio shack sells it) that has 2 rca jacks on one end and the 1/8 inch jack on the other. You can plug the 1/8 jack the the input jack of your sound card (assuming you have one) and the two rca jacks to the mixer.
From there, set the volume controls (double click the speaker by the windows clock, bottom right) to make sure that the Aux In (or whatever has a good setting and not muted).
After that, it's gravy. You just use any ol' Wav editing program. Theres even one built into Windows under Start, Accessories, Entertainment, Sound REcorder. But it has a 60 second limitation I believe. Just hit the record and it records what you're doing. But maybe try to google "sound recorder 60 second limitation" and see if theres a fix. I remember someone asking about how you edit your registry to remove the 60 sec limitation, perhaps there is a way in the registry.
I dont know of any free programs, but my favorite wav editing program is Goldwave (Goldwave.com). Been using it 6 years plus now (and they update the program frequently). It can save the file into many formats, .wav, .mp3, etc. The thing about .wav format is that it's 10 times as big as .mp3 (ie 5 minutes is about 55Mb, whereas 5 mins in .mp3 format is about 5.5 Mb).
So try the one I suggested, or google up "sound recorder" or "wav editor" and see what you come up with.
2007-01-13 07:41:41
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answer #1
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answered by SharpGuy 6
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there are many at www.mp3machine.com
I use soundforge but you need to $$$$
2007-01-13 15:33:42
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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