You can skip through sections, and use speed controls to speed up and slow down recordings. Albums can also be saved to iTunes, ready to sync to iPods, iPhones or iPads.Īudio Notetaker has an easy-to-use playback tool.
#Audio notetaker pdf
Recordings are saved in WMA format (although if you imported an MP3 or M4A file, it'll be saved as MP3), with slides and PDF content embedded into the audio - as album art, so you can see what you're listening to on screen. Recordings are saved as albums, with each section a separate track, using the recording name as the album title. Although it's gaining rapid acceptance, Opus is not yet supported everywhere, so once you've made a recording you can export it to a format that will play on a media player, ready to listen on the go. Sonocent uses the open Opus audio encoding system for its files. Licensing only enables recording: the software will always work as a player, so you can share recordings with colleagues and friends. Other options include site licences, short-term 6-month licences and managed deployments with a control panel.
#Audio notetaker install
It's available for PC and Mac, with a permanent £95.99 licence that lets you install on two machines. Designed as a recording and transcription tool, it mixes an innovative visual recording tool with basic note-taking and powerful playback controls. That's where Sonocent Audio Notetaker 3.0 comes in. If you're using a PC, there's always Microsoft's OneNote, which syncs audio recordings to notes - but it doesn't give you the transcription tools that make turning a recording into text if not easy, then at least less of a chore. So how can you make a record of meetings, of lectures, of medical notes? You could use a smartphone, but it's not got that much memory - and there's still the problem of how you get a recording from your phone to your PC. MiniDisc never really made it either, and the last recorders were sold earlier this year.
Those little reels of plastic coated in iron oxide just don't cut it in today's digital world.
The tape recorder is dead, or at the very least dying.