Audio Stream Recording Software

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Faustina Bartsch

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Aug 4, 2024, 11:00:32 PM8/4/24
to rweberpresin
Notethat you will not have the Windows WASAPI (loopback) option mentioned in that link because you are using a very old version of Audacity. Are you using 2.0.3 because that is the only released version of Audacity that can see your audio devices? If so, you could try 2.1.3-alpha from the top of -nightly/. Note that is not a finished release.

I had tried another piece of software (Replay something) that worked great. All I needed to do was install and run the software, click the stream to start the webpage and the software automatically started and recorded. Only snag was the deceiving software description. It was supposed to be limited with the $ for advanced features. However, anything that the software recorded stopped at 50%.


My installed v 2.1.2 does not line up with your tutorial link. Neither MME, Windows direct sound nor WASAPI have Stereo Mix as a recording device option. I tried Windows direct sound per the attached since that seemed the most logical but as you can see once I started the website stream then clicked record, nothing but a flat line?



Mark


In my Microsoft Stream recording, I would like to include audio from a video playing in a browser tab that will be displayed on screen. Currently, Microsoft Streams does not capture the audio from the video in the screen recording.


One of the best ways to record streaming audio is to use a desktop app like Movavi Screen Recorder. This recorder lets you capture system sounds and audio from your microphone. It can also record screen and webcam. When your recording is ready, you can use simple editing tools to trim your audio or cut out unnecessary parts. The audio file will be saved in the MP3 format.


Now, you can cut out unnecessary fragments from your recording. To do this, place the marker on the timeline and click Cut. Select the part that you want to cut out and hit Delete fragment.


A great way to record an audio stream is to use a free online audio recorder like Screen Capture. This web recorder lets you record audio on your device, ranging from short snippets and clips right up to lengthy music sequences. It works on both Windows 10 and Mac and, as the name implies, it's essentially a screen capturing tool, so it records the entire screen of your device, producing a video file that you can then rip the streaming audio from or convert it to MP3 or other popular audio formats.


Screen Capture will offer the ability to record from your microphone and webcam if desired. For streaming audio, it's best to leave these options unchecked and click on the Start Recording button to proceed.


A new page will open up, and your browser will ask for permission to allow Screen Capture to record your screen. Select the window or screen you want to enable and hit the Allow button to carry on.


Once the audio has finished playing and recording from your streaming video, you can then stop the screen capturing process and save the file to a folder on the PC or device you're using. From there, you can rip the audio from the files you make or convert them into other formats.


If you're a Google Chrome user wondering how to record streaming audio from your videos, live radio broadcasts, and other sources, the best way to do so may be with the help of the Audio Capture add-on. This is a simple browser extension you can install on Google Chrome, appearing in the top right of every window, along with your other extensions. It captures all audio on the current tab you're using and allows you to save the newly-created audio file onto your computer.


The first step of using this streaming audio recorder is to get it downloaded and installed. You'll need to open up your Google Chrome browser and then head to the Audio Capture page in the Chrome Web Store to download it.


When you're ready to capture the audio stream of yours, open up the tab with the audio you want to record and then hit the Start button on the extension. It will automatically start recording until you hit Finish or until the maximum time limit is reached. You can save the recorded sound by hitting the Save button.


If you want to know how to record streaming audio on an Apple device like an iPad or iPhone, one option you have is to make use of the Screen Recording feature. This will technically record the whole screen, including video and audio, but you can then create a copy of just the audio file with conversion tools or programs or rip the audio later on.


3. Finishing up. When the audio is over, hit the red button again to stop the recording. You should see a notification saying that the recording has been saved to your camera roll. You can then convert or rip the audio from that file.


Those on Android devices can turn to the Google Play Store and download the ADV Screen Recorder app, which has more than 10 million downloads, to record streaming audio on their devices. This streaming audio recorder is free, with ads, and it offers several features like the ability to use front and back cameras while recording, adding custom text and banners, trimming video files, and more. Like other options on the list, it's a screen recorder, so it produces video files rather than audio files, but you can rip the audio or convert it later on with other software. Also, it only records audio from the microphone, not internally, which can affect the quality.


2. Recording. When you're ready to use the app, open it up, adjust the settings to your liking, and then press the Record button in the top right to begin recording. You should see a green camera button appear at the top, and you can click it to start and stop recording, as desired.


Features: check if the functionality of the software suits the result you want to achieve. Most audio recorders come with basic editing features, but if you need something more, you might want to look for advanced solutions.


Yes, you can. There are various ways in which this can be done across many devices like Windows computers and tablets, Apple Macs and iPhones, and Android smartphones too. You can use any of the following programs:


Yes, you can use Audacity as a streaming audio recorder. To begin, download and install Audacity, open the program, and then click the red record button to start the process. Click on the Stop button when you're finished.


I have been creating a few videos of screen recordings (with audio, no web cam) to add to our teams work instructions file. I have been able to record with audio with no problems in the past. However the last few days it disables my microphone as soon as I connect it. I have checked my preferences to ensure the Stream webpage allows my microphone yet it still disables it. How do I fix this?


Same problem for me. Tried Edge browser and chrome incognito but with no success. In the browser the microphone is "allowed" but stream anyways displays error message instructing me to "click on the lock icon and set microphone to allowed and reload browser".


The record screen option requires camera permissions before it will work. I was able to plug in a spare webcam, enable the camera permissions, refresh the page, disable my camera and then switch to my non-camera mic. Recording then worked fine.


Here too. Using wireless headset (PowerBeats). Microphone is working with Skype and Teams but not here in Microsoft Stream specifically. I've checked all security settings (all that I can drill down to) and nothing works.


I was using the same setup just fine a few weeks ago. This is a recent bug. Sadly, the device I'm trying to record screen on is older and we have no camera to plug in per samccs' suggested workaround.


I'm sitting here listening to a radio show that is being broadcast live over an internet stream, but I would like to keep bits and pieces for later-enjoyment. Is there a way I can easily record streams in real-time? I should note also (not sure if it's necessary or not) that this stream requires me to first login before listening.


VLC media player is a highly portable multimedia player and multimedia framework capable of reading most audio and video formats (MPEG-2, MPEG-4, H.264, DivX, MPEG-1, mp3, ogg, aac ...) as well as DVDs, Audio CDs VCDs, and various streaming protocols. See the full features list.


You can check out a program I have developed to this end (front end for stream recording). It relies on MPlayer, VLC, or any other recorder you choose. It sports quite a few interesting features (IMHO), give it a try...


All mentioned can save radio songs with tags for title, artist etc. StreamWriter deserves a special position as it is able to record multiple streams simultaneously, schedule recording of specific stations, titles, artists, etc.


Problem #2: TheYour First Recording docs tell me to "play a source of audio... You should receive a message in the status window indicating that audio streaming has started." Nothing shows up except "Successfully connected to driver" even though audio is currently playing.


Problem #3: I click Start Recording and I see "Recording mode switched ON. Waiting for an audio stream to record." There already IS audio pouring out of my system. How can I make SoundTap recognize this?


I tried the solution above, but to no avail. Could the disruption be caused by McAfee software? I've tried tweaking it every which way and I tried turning off McAfee features, but nothing seems to help. It also has a wireless control center called Killer from Intel, so I'm looking at those settings as well, but haven't found anything that might interrupt the service.


I'm on a new windows 10 system (Dell XPS 15); it literally just came this month. My old Dell Inspiron (also Windows 10) works great with this software, but I don't want to have to keep it around forever just to be able to use SoundTap. It will die eventually. Also, the SountTap and RecordPad software look really different on my new computer. They don't scale well to the new computer's resolution and the start button is almost miniscule. I have an NVIDIA 1650 Ti video card and my res is 3480x2400.

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