Quote:
Originally Posted by gosha
hello,
I have some lessons I recorded with a digital recorder. I need to listen to them and I would like to do it on unix, which has become my os for everyday work. The lessons have been converted with a software from their (LG) format, to .wav (software only works on windows, of course). The problem is, the files work perfect on windows (I use jetaudio) but once on unix they go very fast and they are just unusable. I'v tried mplayer, aucat, xmms, all with no avail.
mplayer's output while playing:
Code:
Audio file file format detected.
==========================================================================
Opening audio decoder: [pcm] Uncompressed PCM audio decoder
AUDIO: 8000 Hz, 1 ch, s16le, 128.0 kbit/100.00% (ratio: 16000->16000)
Selected audio codec: [pcm] afm: pcm (Uncompressed PCM)
==========================================================================
ao2: 8000 Hz 1 chans s16le [0x9]
AO: [sun] 8000Hz 1ch s16be (2 bytes per sample)
Video: no video
Starting playback...
any idea?
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Two possibilities. Either you have a problem with the sampling rate in which case you will have to learn how to use your audio beyond basics or
you have a crappy AC97 audio chipset so the serious Unix applications
have a problem with it. Remedy is to have real audio card.