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> I'm developing a website for a singer/songwriter and want to include brief (30 second) samples of his songs. > > I used the internal recorder in my PC while playing his CD on it. When I recorded an excerpt at "CD quality--mono" the file was 1.6MEG. Then I tried recording it at "Radio quality--mono" and the file was 700K. > > The 700K version took about 5 minutes to download from the Internet. > > What should I do to reduce the size of the file and make downloading faster? First off I recommend using other than the Sound Recorder or Media Player to record the pieces. If your sound card didn't come with a recorder that lets you control the quality level of the sound file, go get ahold of Cool Edit, at http://www.syntrillium.com - I use it to record my pieces directly to hard disk, and it does a great job of clean-up if you need to do that too. The major strength is of course that you can specify 44.1KHz, 16-bit Stereo for the file output. Secondly, the resultant 5-minute .WAV file will be prohibitively huge anyway - so go to http://www.realaudio.com and get a copy of the 3.0 encoder for RealAudio, which, amongst others, accepts .WAV files as source material for encoding into a .RA or .RAM file. The RA file will be greatly reduced in size but not in quality...! For an example of this, go to my EarthLight Studios at http://www.primenet.com/~sgoodman/Studios and note the size of the two RealAudio files I've got there for downloading/listening. The original WAV files were in the neighborhood of 54MB each! The encoded RA files are about 600KB. This is well within the limitations as far as size and speed of downloading is concerned. And, if your ISP supports streaming audio using RealAudio (like mine doesn't!), the people clicking on the links to your files will hear it playing almost immediately. Hope this helps. Any other questions, let me know! Stephen. * Stephen Goodman It's the Loop Of The Week! And it's free! * EarthLight Productions http://www.primenet.com/~sgoodman/Studios