Record any sound, including music, dialogs from movies,
game sounds, streaming audio, or anything else.
Record audio from a
microphone or any sound source connected to your sound card
line-in including, VCR, tape player, etc.
Supports 14 different audio
file formats including MP3, MP2, WMA, WAV, and OGG
file formats. Scheduled recording feature lets you
record even if the program isn't running.
Features:
Recording Sources: You can record from the following devices: sound card stereo
speakers output, sound card microphone input, sound card line in, CD
player, and the modem.
Automated
Features:
Timed Recording: You can set a time limit on how long you want the program
to record for. The auto split feature can be used to break the
recording up into multiple files.
Scheduled Recording:
The scheduled recording feature allows you to have an unattended
scheduled recording. You don't even have to have the program
running. It will start automatically for the recording. It can
also open a live Internet audio stream like an Internet radio
station so it can record it.
Skin Support:
Comes with 12
built in skins to customize the appearance of the program.
Equalizer:
The Equalizer is your central control for customized audio. It
allows you to adjust small ranges of tones in order to improve and
customize the quality of the sound. With most stereos you only have
control over two broad spectrums of sound: Bass and Treble. The TEC
Sound Recorder Equalizer breaks this into 12 distinct bandwidths for
finer control.
Simple to use
Interface: Recording sound is very easy with TEC Sound Recorder. Select the
sound source, the output settings, and press the record button to
start the recording process.
Sound Source
You can record from the following devices: sound card stereo
speakers output, sound card microphone input, sound card line in, CD
player, and the modem.
Output Settings
The output location is where you want the recorded sound
files to be placed in on your hard drive. You can view the contents
of this folder by selecting 'view output folder' from the tools
menu. The default location for this folder is the 'Sound Files'
folder located on your desktop.
Filters:
Notch: A notch filter rejects a narrow frequency band
and leaves the rest of the spectrum little changed. The most
common example is 60-Hz noise from power lines.
High
Pass: A high-pass filter is a filter that passes
high frequencies but attenuates (or reduces) frequencies lower
than the cutoff frequency. The actual amount of attenuation for
each frequency varies from filter to filter. It is sometimes
called a low-cut filter; the terms bass-cut filter or rumble
filter are also used in audio applications. A high-pass filter
is the opposite of a low-pass filter.
Low
Pass: A low-pass filter is a filter that passes
low frequencies well, but attenuates (or reduces) frequencies
higher than the cutoff frequency. The actual amount of
attenuation for each frequency varies from filter to filter. It
is sometimes called a high-cut filter, or treble cut filter when
used in audio applications.
Auto
Gain Control: Sound cards use AGC to improve
recordings. It normalizes the dynamic range of a clip so that
all parts of a clip will have roughly the same volume. Auto-Gain
is most useful for items like news, where anchors and
interviewers speak at a variety of volume levels, and with less
dynamic music.
Equalizer Tab Screenshot!
Filters Tab Screenshot!
Timed Recording Settings
Screenshot!
Scheduled Recording Screenshot!
System Requirements
Supported Operating
Systems: Windows 2000 Service Pack
3; Windows 98; Windows 98 Second Edition; Windows ME;
Windows Server 2003; Windows XP Service Pack 2