Saturday, August 15, 2009

Getting your audio typed up can be easy - IF you get help from a professional!

Most people could listen to their own recorded audio and type out what's said fairly accurately, but it's actually cheaper and more efficient ( and a lot less boring! ) to get qualified, reliable professionals to do it for you.

A digital sound recorderImage via Wikipedia


Assunta Fantasia's business is delivering professional transcription and secretarial services reliably to meet your deadline.

Fantasia Secretarial Services (FSS) draws on Assunta's long experience in a range of roles at the Australian Institute of Management and as office manager for leading HR companies.

In most cases a 30 minute audio recording of decent quality will cost between 30 and 40 US$ but all work can be negotiated and prices can be adjusted for regular customers.

Locator map for AustraliaImage via Wikipedia


For more details or to get straight into it you can leave a reply at the bottom of this post, email, phone or Skype.




Tips for better sound recording

It's not easy to get decent sound quality in a recording, especially if you have a low-end microphone or there is noise affecting the audability of the voice(s)

You can dramatically improve sound quality for voice with a free app called LEVELATOR from the brilliant people at conversationsnetwork.org

It works for Windows Mac and Linux and you simply drag your sound file onto the Icon and the new "cleaned" audio is saved. click here for the free download

What is The Levelator™?

Do you believe in magic? You will after using The Levelator to enhance your podcast. And you'll be amazed that it's free, now even for commercial use.

So what is The Levelator? It's software that runs on Windows, OS X (universal binary), or Linux (Ubuntu) that adjusts the audio levels within your podcast or other audio file for variations from one speaker to the next, for example. It's not a compressor, normalizer or limiter although it contains all three. It's much more than those tools, and it's much simpler to use. The UI is dirt-simple: Drag-and-drop any WAV or AIFF file onto The Leveler's application window, and a few moments later you'll find a new version which just sounds better.


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