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Click Here to View the Full Version with Images: How to record Art Bell & other radio shows


SmartAZ
02-15-2005, 03:57 PM
RadioShark

I absolutely love my new radioSHARK from Griffin Technology. It basically turns your hard drive into a VCR for radio. The USB device records any AM or FM radio broadcast directly to your computer (Mac or PC). The coolest thing is that you can program it to record any program automatically.

RadiosharkOf course, there's already plenty of streaming radio content available online and lots of good shows are archived for listening-on-demand. And you can use tools like Audio Hijack to digitally record them for portability. Even still, radioSHARK is useful for me. For example, last night my friend Loren Coleman was a guest on Coast To Coast AM, which airs here from 10pm to 3am. I knew I'd be asleep not long after the show came on. (The past 30 days of Coast To Coast are now available online, but you have to subscribe.) So in about 10 seconds, I programmed radioSHARK to turn itself on and record the show while I snoozed. When I woke up this morning, I loaded the audio file into my iPOD and I've been listening to it in my car. I also set radioSHARK to record at the same time each night so Coast To Coast will be waiting for me every morning.

radioSHARK also has a "time shift" feature to "pause" live radio à la Tivo. The one thing that annoys me about the radioSHARK software is that you can only record in AIFF or AAC formats. It's a hassle to convert those big files into manageable MP3s, especially when you're dealing with a several hour broadcast. radioSHARK isn't cheap at $69.99, but it's really easy to use and is sure to provide hours of aural pleasure. Link

posted by David Pescovitz at 12:10:29 PM boingboing (http://www.griffintechnology.com/products/radioshark/)

lotsakids
02-22-2005, 09:55 AM
I have not tried this program, so I can't give an opinion, but this might be a better option... namely since it is free. I'd be sure to run a virus scan on the archive before uncompressing, and then run your adware and virus again once installed, but:

http://www.freecorder.com/?AID=9885561&PID=1448936&SID=free

Freecorder does exactly as it sounds -- it is an easy-to-use FREE software program that lets you record sounds on your PC. The benefits:

* Records what you hear from your speakers.
* Saves recordings as MP3 files.
* Easy to use.
* You can also record from the microphone or line-in inputs on your PC.

Freecorder is a great way to get started with capturing audio on your PC.

Basically you'd run a standard 1/8" plug from the radio to the line-in jack on the soundcard. I'd also run a few samples to adjust the balance and volume in advance. This sounds like it'd save the extra step of file conversion, as well.

Potemkin
02-22-2005, 10:49 AM
This month's Wired had a page of the 3 most popular solutions, RadioShark being one of them.

The other two seemed to be similar but recorded directly into MP3, wav. I guess RadioShark is too wired into Apple to have it any other way.

Unfortunately I left the page at home. If anyone wants me to add it let me know.

SmartAZ
02-22-2005, 12:44 PM
The more common, safer, and cheaper way to record long shows or shows at inconvenient times is to plug your radio into the audio jack of a VCR.

Potemkin
02-22-2005, 01:52 PM
The more common, safer, and cheaper way to record long shows or shows at inconvenient times is to plug your radio into the audio jack of a VCR.

Harware hacking. MMM, love it.

I put a shortware radio tuned to the correct station and a tape recorder with the "record" button pre-pushed all on a power strip on a mechnical timer.

Midnight it tripped and I almost got all of the program.

SmartAZ
02-22-2005, 02:11 PM
I put a shortware radio tuned to the correct station and a tape recorder with the "record" button pre-pushed all on a power strip on a mechnical timer.

Midnight it tripped and I almost got all of the program.
The glitch with the Art Bell show is that it's four hours long. A VCR will record that long, but very few tape recorders will.

lotsakids
02-22-2005, 09:44 PM
Of course with the VCR solution, you might have a bit of difficulty trying to listen on the way to work... :) However, you do gain the advantage of being able to preprogram the time. Another solution, if you have broadband is to get a stream ripper and find an internet station that carries the show live.