mahesh_narayan wrote:I am not too knowledgeable on recording gadgets, and on iPods in general, but am looking for a good device to record my music lessons.
Can this one be used for recording purposes?
http://shopping.rediff.com/shop/product ... ove%2020GB
If yes, how do you guys feel about it? I am thinking about the 80GB one. The 160GB one is too expensive (almost 18K). How much space would a typical concert recording take?
To sort of repeat again. At this point, I recommend the Olympus recorders (higher end i.e. > $100, i have the DS-30:
http://www.olympusamerica.com/cpg_secti ... oduct=1276) for the following reasons
1. Very small, light and portable. Fits easily in your shirt pocket and you dont even feel it is there.
2. Decent quality (certainly more than sufficient) for music lessons - but certainly not for "pro recordings". But on the recordings I have - they are clear - no hiss, no muffled sound etc. I was pleasantly surprised that the quality exceeded my expectations.
3. Since it uses WMA you can record quite a bit (many lessons) before you find a need to transfer them to computer.
4. Transferring is as easy as transferring from a USB drive. But if you want it on a mp3 player you need to convert from WMA to MP3. There are many easily available tools for this - but one can still argue that this is a minor inconvenience.
5. Can create index marks on the fly to isolate portions. As far as I know only this and minidisc recorders have this capability. The Olympus basically stores this info in the WMA file.
6. With a little bit of work, you can create m4a (mp4 audio files) with the same index marks (as audio chapters) and then you can have them play on say iPod. I have done this - although on the Mac, and it depended on one tool from Apple which I think is available only the mac - it basically "mixes" the index information into an audio file. Not sure if an equiv one exists on Windows - I would be very surprised if it does not. Its not exactly rocket science that only Apple has figured out.
But like I said if you want to also use to for recording concerts and jam sesions where high quality becomes an more important factor, then this will get lower marks compared to Edirol, Xoom etc. because of #2 (but you loose out on #5). But for mainly music lessons, IMO, this is the best bet.
Arun