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Of course, the first thing you need to do is hook up your cassette to your computer. You'll need a cable to patch the player into the AUX input of your sound card, if it has one. You'll also need to change your sound settings (by right-clicking the speaker icon at the bottom right corner of your screen) to accept input from the AUX input. If your sound card doesn't have an AUX input, you might have to record with a microphone.
There's lots of software out there. Creative Labs ships "Sound Recorder" with their sound cards. It's adequate for converting input to WAV files. Cakewalk's "PYRO" is a better product and is fairly cheap. "Audio Cleaning Lab" is pretty good as well. Both of them let you record a whole side of tape and helps you divide it into songs, clean up the tape hiss and do other editing effects, including conversion to MP3. My favourite software package is CoolEdit by Syntrillium. Unfortunately, Adobe bought the company several years ago and stopped marketting it except as part of a more expensive suite of software, but if you can find a copy of it, use it... its FFT feature allows you to completely remove all rumble and hiss from your recording.

2007-02-18 00:34:39 · answer #1 · answered by Rando 4 · 0 0

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