Audio Cassette Tapes Digitized – Hear that Voice Again

Hi, I’m Myrtha, I work at Play it Again Video. Today, a customer, Danielle, walked in the door with audio cassettes she said had recordings of her daughter speaking Balinese. She brought her audio tapes to transfer them to CDs. Danielle and her daughter lived in Bali for a number of years right amongst the natives. In one of the audio cassettes, we even heard a rooster cock-a-doodle-do.

It was amazing how her daughter picked up Balinese just living there for a few months. From the recordings digitized from the audio cassettes, we could hear her joking with her friends like 2 Balinese little girls. You could not have guessed one of the two had curly blonde hair and deep blue eyes.

I told Danielle, my biggest regret was not recording my daughter saying the Shabbat prayer which she learned to do in Pre-School at the Jewish Community Center near our house. She could say it in perfect pitch and intonation (we are Chinese), and I did not record that on audio or video.

If you did record your children’s voices, we can help you transfer your audio or video tapes to digital forms; you and your children can hear that voice again.

Comments

  1. The message about the mdeiumAre you one of those people that swore when CDs came out that you were never buying another form of music/video media until they were able to stream directly to your brain? Yeah, well, I was too, except my gadget/techie urges outweigh my undertones.This is a good thing for you, as I can gently walk you through the differences between two types of video media that, on the outside, appear rather identical.Just the factsOkay, look I could sit here and write out things like maximum data transfer rates and codecs and bit rates and make your eyes glaze over faster than a Krispy Kreme donut machine at a police convention but what’s the point? You’ve probably found those details already, and you’re still confused, and that’s why you’re here. So here are the basics.DVD Optical discStorage capacity: 4.7GB (single layer), 8.5GB (dual layer)Resolution: 720 480 (480i)Blu-ray High-density optical discStorage capacity: 25GB (single layer), 50GB (dual layer)Resolution: 1920 1080 (1080p)In short, a disc can hold over 5x as much data as a , and even more importantly as a result of the storage space it is capable of producing a video image that is more than twice the resolution of a DVD.Let me put it this way: Consider your television. Now, imagine a picture on it that is DVD quality. From the top to the bottom of the screen, there will be 480 lines making up the picture. Not bad. Now imagine the same image in Blu-ray quality. From top to bottom, in the same exact space, there will be 1080 lines making up the same image. Which one do you think shows more detail and looks sharper? In this case, more is better.Other considerationsSo, if you don’t already have one, should you rush out and buy a Blu-ray player and a bunch of Blu-ray movies?Yes, but only if you have an HDTV. Non-HD (or SDTV) televisions only display up to 480 lines of resolution, so connecting a Blu-ray player to an SDTV is a waste of resolution and money.What should you use to connect a Blu-ray player to your HDTV?The simplest, easiest, and best quality option is to use an HDMI cable. They transmit both the picture and the sound, so you don’t need to mess with a second cable for audio. Since, like all wire cables, they are just made of copper strands, don’t overpay in most cases, a $50 HDMI cable won’t send that string of 1s and 0s to your TV any better than a $5 one. and are good sources for quality, inexpensive cables.Should you throw away all your DVDs?Nah, not yet. There are a whole bunch of movies not available on Blu-ray yet (as I’m writing this in April, 2012). Titles are being added every day, but DVD has a nine-year head start on Blu-ray, so it will take some time. Additionally, Blu-ray players are what techie types like to call backwards compatible they’ll play regular DVDs just fine. However, a regular DVD player will not play Blu-ray discs.Is this going to be the last media switch I’m going to have to make?Maybe. Maybe not. Streaming video is becoming more and more popular and of higher and higher quality so some consider it just a matter of time until physical media for video/audio to go the way of the dinosaurs. Speaking personally, while I have not bought a CD in at least 3 or 4 years, and I utilize multiple streaming video services I do still buy a Blu-ray disc or box set once in a while. Many movies I want to watch in HD are simply not available (legally) in any format other than Blu-ray at the moment.>>a0GD Star Ratingloading…

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