Armed Polite Society

Main Forums => The Roundtable => Topic started by: JAlexander on July 08, 2005, 06:19:53 AM

Title: RealAudio capture?
Post by: JAlexander on July 08, 2005, 06:19:53 AM
Do any of y'all happen to know of a good (and free) method of capturing RA streams?  I'd just like to be able to save it on my HD and watch/listen at home rather than suffer through the fits and starts of the stream.

James
Title: RealAudio capture?
Post by: InfidelSerf on July 08, 2005, 06:29:47 AM
I used to record many streams from various sources with Sound Forge by Sonic Foundy.
You should be able to use any free recording program.. but basically it will record from the output signal to your speakers...
so it doesn't matter if it is streaming or from a cd playing.

With Sound Forge it gave me the ability to record a 3hr long streaming radio talk show.. then I would go back and cut out the commercial breaks.  Then I would convert that large .wav file to an .mp3
Title: RealAudio capture?
Post by: Harold Tuttle on July 08, 2005, 07:08:27 AM
real audio is an end format that is designed to defy capturing

a clever man might take the speaker output and plug it into the microphone input
Title: RealAudio capture?
Post by: InfidelSerf on July 08, 2005, 07:49:37 AM
It's not that difficult.. if it plays on your speakers.. it can be captured.. but you will be capturing ALL ouput.. so if you have sounds on msging apps etc.. they will be included in the recording.  Not a biggie as long as you shut them off during your recording.. or just deal with it.
As Mr. Tuttle stated you can always do the output to mic trick.  But with Sound Forge you can avoid that as it captures that output signal internally.
I'm sure other free recording apps could do the same.
Title: RealAudio capture?
Post by: lee n. field on July 08, 2005, 04:59:35 PM
I had to work through this myself recently.  This works for me.

A little utility called vsound will capture any OSS audio stream to a wav file.  

Realaudio capture goes like this: "vsound -f whatever.wav helix-player -q whichever.ram" (with Real codecs in the appropriate place, of course) produces a wav file from the RA stream.  Use lame or audacity to convert to the audio file format of choice.

(watch your assumptions.)