![]() ![]() When you know the angle and direction that picks up sound the best, you can avoid the keyboard noise. (Look for one that actually gets the mic close to and in front of your lips. Microphones operate using the principle of directionality. however, there is typically a range which sounds the best, and I would say that between -50dB. Also the use of a headset-attached microphone could provide a bit more isolation. 2) Press B on your keyboard to open the Smart Controls. What I've tried doing so far is before I start talking I will leave some silence to remove the hum of the mic for about 3-5 seconds, and what I've also tried before is clicking my mouse for a few seconds and the my keyboard but I can't get audacity to isolate those sounds, after I've removed the hum of the mic, to remove it from the background. ![]() (Koz may remember the name of that utility that was discussed in this forum sometime back that allowed you to combine and mix audio devices and present them as a new audio device, that might be the needed glue).Īssuming that you are touch-typing, you could try laying a heavy blanket over the keyboard and your hands. It wants to input from one sound device and output to another. Whether it's output could be piped to your application or not I don't know. I have never used it so I don't know what its limitations are. ![]() ![]() To Silma's problem, clickrepair does have a real-time mode. I have both: wave repair is an excellent tool both for manual repairs to waveforms and (what I use if for) has a good workflow for transferring LPs to digitals and then splitting for conversion to MP3 or burning to CD. Clickrepair (Australian $40) is much better at automated click removal than wave repair. ![]()
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