Talk about a loss of quality.SashatheMan said:best way to do it, play the song, then put a little tape recorder to the speaker, record the song. Then press play on the recorder and put a microphone next to it , to record the song on the computer in a .wav format. Then covert it to mp3 using some other program.
Not if you use TotalRecorder.mr_brightside said:Talk about a loss of quality.
Going from lossy to anything = loss of quality, it doesnt matter what you use, since the algorithm is designed to "save" on the irrelevant parts.wanton-wonton said:Not if you use TotalRecorder.
That's the worst way to do it =.=. You can enable the WAV output in your Recording controls (should work on any full duplex sound card) and then you can just play your sound and record it at the same time, as a .wav or .mp3 file (depending on what recording program your using). I've done that plenty of times, and as long as you don't have any extra sounds in the background (like MSN), then it works like a charm in converting sound files that normally would be hard to convert.SashatheMan said:best way to do it, play the song, then put a little tape recorder to the speaker, record the song. Then press play on the recorder and put a microphone next to it , to record the song on the computer in a .wav format. Then covert it to mp3 using some other program.