The Best Portable Recorder For Audio Presenters: Edirol R1 The Edirol R1 is
a new fascinating portable audio recorder, that packs digital
... The Edirol R1 allows direct, one-button stereo recording both
via
its two ...
http://www.masterviews.com/2004/11/05/the_best_portable_recorder_for.htm
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<species8471@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> schreef in bericht
news:1141291321.726122.243250@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>I am a grad student and I would like to record lectures, meetings,
> seminars, etc. So I need some recording device that can pick up sound
> from at least 25' away. (It would be even better if it could record
> from 50' away in case the room is really packed.) I've considered a
> number of options:
>
> 1. Digital recorder: I've heard the Olympus WS-310M (or a similar
> model) might be usable for this purpose.
>
> 2. mp3 player: I've heard the iRiver iHP-120 has a decent built-in
> microphone. It costs about the same as the Olympus WS-310M, but it
> seems like I would get a lot more for my money since it has 20 GB of
> storage and doubles as an mp3 player. I think it also has an input jack
> so I could get a better (or directional) microphone if that turns out
> to be necessary for a particular purpose. However, I wouldn't know what
> mic to buy.
>
> 3. PDA: I don't know much about this option, although I would have to
> guess that any PDA that comes with an adequate microphone (or line-in)
> and adequate storage would be fairly expensive. Since I don't currently
> use a PDA, it might be hard to justify the cost.
>
> 4. USB microphone: It sounds like this thing would do quite well:
> http://www.soundprofessionals.com/cgi-bin/gold/item/SP-USB-MIC-1
> I would guess it's a better microphone than I would get with options
> 1-3; the only question is whether the difference in quality would
> justify hauling my laptop everywhere.
>
> I'd really appreciate any advice about the advantages of each of these
> options, particularly if you can reccommend a specific product.
>
> -Paul
>


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