

- #RECORD MAC UDIO WITH AUDACITY AND SOUNDSOURCE MANUAL#
- #RECORD MAC UDIO WITH AUDACITY AND SOUNDSOURCE UPGRADE#
- #RECORD MAC UDIO WITH AUDACITY AND SOUNDSOURCE SOFTWARE#
- #RECORD MAC UDIO WITH AUDACITY AND SOUNDSOURCE PLUS#
If you are interested in features or functions not mentioned in this brief introduction, please see the Audacity Manual for more tutorials or assistance.
#RECORD MAC UDIO WITH AUDACITY AND SOUNDSOURCE SOFTWARE#
Maintained by LEADR under the direction of Alice Lynn McMichaelĪudacity is an accessible, open-source, multi-track audio recording and editing software with a number of useful features and effects, particularly for preparing podcasts. This guide is prepared by Daniel Fandino with contributions by Sara Bijani and Alyssa Lopez Editing and Recording Audio with Audacity Editing and Recording Audio with Audacity This repository holds all of the markdown resource guides used by the Lab for the Education and Advancement of Digital Research. The latter is not what would help in this case.Editing and Recording Audio with Audacity | Skip to the content. Sometimes, there are Y-splitters available that are really duplicators / replicators, which makes the mic+headset combined connection available on 2 split ends. On the other hand, a USB audio dongle is so inexpensive (only few dollars more than a TRRS Y-splitter cable), that it's perhaps something you won't fret over, if it broke or you lost it.įor those getting the TRRS Y-splitter cable, make sure that the 2 split ends are one for mic, other for headphone.

#RECORD MAC UDIO WITH AUDACITY AND SOUNDSOURCE UPGRADE#
If you get serious about recordings, you would probably want to upgrade to a USB audio interface (not adapter) but that would be in a price range of say $100 and upwards, rather than $10 for a "get you started" adapter. There are many similar devices for sale, and some only provide audio out (for example 7-channel surround sound) so make sure you get one that has an audio input socket - and if you don't need surround sound output, don't pay extra for something you will never use! Audacity should recognise it as two Audio devices, one for input and one for output. That plugs into a USB port and gives you two sockets for "microphone in" and "headphones out". There are many similar devices available in the same price range.
#RECORD MAC UDIO WITH AUDACITY AND SOUNDSOURCE PLUS#
a "thumb drive plus some audio connectors". Note, this is not a recommendation for this specific device (I've never used it) - it's just an example of what these adapters look like, i.e. The cheapest option would be to get a simple "USB audio adaptor" like this one: (usb-stick)-pc-mac The fundamental problem is that the computer can't both record and play back sounds through the one audio socket, so at best you would be continually swapping the plugs between your Casio keyboard to record, and your headphones or speakers when checking the recording you made with Audacity.

This is not really intended for what you want to do. Like many laptops, according to this page your ASUS UX51 has a "combo audio socket". The "headset" option should let you record sound, but. I would have expected you had three options, not the two that you mentioned: "headset", "headphones", and "speaker out". Windows asks if what I am plugging in is a headphone or "speaker out".
