Learning plan 7 collaborative webinar presentation

Post on 10-Jul-2015

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Transcript of Learning plan 7 collaborative webinar presentation

Beth KoskiBobee Bero

May Montezon

What equipment will you need?

What software must you download?

Tips for writing your script.

How to add music for free.

Where will you host your podcast?

Why are we creating this content? Who is our audience? What do we want our webinar to achieve? When and how are we developing the

content? Where are we going to host our webinar? Evaluate the hosting site and why this was

our best choice?

Look for this symbol

An open source cross-platform for recording and editing software program.

Audacity is developed by group of volunteers and distributed under GNU General Public License (GPL)

It is called open source because their source code is available to anyone or use.

To record live audio

Import and export sound files using WAV, AIFF, AU, FLAC, and Ogg Vorbis files. Also, MPEG can be import using libmad and export MP3 files using LAME encoder library.

Edit or combine files or new recordings

Supports 16 bit, 24 bit, and 32 bits

Easy to edit with copy, paste and cut feature.

Can create voice-overs for podcast or DJ sets using auto duck effect.

Runs on Windows, Mac OS X and GNU/Linux operating systems.

For windows

Recommend with at least 1GB RAM and 1GHz processor audacity would run best with these requirements. If audacity would be used for lengthy multi-track project, it would need a minimum of 2GB RAM and 2GHz processor on OX 10.7 or later.

Recommends to use the latest version of GNU/Linux from your distribution that is compatible with hardware specifications. Audacity will run best with the least of 64 MB RAM and a 300 MHz processor.

1. Go to http://audacity.sourceforge.net/

2. Click download

3. Under windows tab click Audacity 2.0.2 installer (.exe file, 20.4 MB, including help files) for Windows 2000/XP/Vista/Windows 7/Windows 8

4. Follow the instructions for installing and after installing you can use the program.

Lame is an open source application used to encode audio into the MP3 file format.

Lame was created by Mike Cheng in 1989, it is a recursive acronym for:

Lame Ain’t an MP3 Encoder

The acronym reflects the early history when it was not an encoder but a set of patches against the freely available ISO demonstration source code.

Now that is a MP3 encoder the LAME acronym has become a misnomer.

Collect all your podcasts in one site, find out what other people are subscribing to and play anywhere.

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