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2007-01-13 20:40:58 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Consumer Electronics Music & Music Players

By the way,I have Windows XP.

2007-01-13 20:41:22 · update #1

4 answers

Some sites let you right click on the link and save the file to your PC. It will probably be in real player or windows media format so you can easily convert these using the matched application or there are many freeware converters available. Other sites like the BBC don't offer a download option, so you have to record the sound track while playing it. I have used Musicmatch to do this (The free version works) but my choice is to use Audacity from
"http://.audacity.soundforge.net"
which is also free (nb the link ends in .net). This records in its own format, but has the lame encoder as an add-on to generate mp3. You will need a fairly fast PC for on-the-fly recording 1.5 gig processor with not much running in the background should be ok

2007-01-13 21:37:34 · answer #1 · answered by The original Peter G 7 · 0 0

Hi,
Audacity is surely the best free music maker and is great for making music.
I got it for free here : http://bitly.com/1mFas9k
It's perfect even for beginners because the software is really intuitive ad easy to use but at the same time it has really advanced functions for more experienced users.
It's a program that I definitely reccomed!

2014-09-12 07:48:43 · answer #2 · answered by ? 2 · 0 0

Audacity is free, and lets you easily record anything. Just play the website, and press record on Audacity.

It also allows you to export to .mp3 files, so you can easily playback your files ON your mp3 later.

hope i helped.

2007-01-14 05:44:03 · answer #3 · answered by chickennoodlesoup 3 · 0 0

Copy the URL, go to this website: Vixy.net, paste on the blank bar, select convert to mp3(audio only), wait a minute, then save to disk.

2007-01-14 04:48:19 · answer #4 · answered by teenidol_12 2 · 0 0

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