[linux-audio-user] Splitting while recording

Eric Dantan Rzewnicki rzewnickie at rfa.org
Tue Mar 22 12:50:28 EST 2005


On Tue, Mar 22, 2005 at 11:26:26AM +0000, Steve Harris wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 21, 2005 at 12:54:17 -0500, Eric Dantan Rzewnicki wrote:
> > On Sun, Mar 20, 2005 at 02:06:20PM +0000, Dubphil wrote:
> > > On Sun, Mar 20, 2005 at 11:46:17AM +0100, Frank Barknecht wrote:
> > > > Hallo,
> > > > I just wonder: Why don't you record in ecasound? I'd say, running MuSE
> > > > just for recording could be a bit overkill. And ecasound is a really
> > > > useful and stable recording software and also very configurable.
> > > Thanks Frank to point me on that, sorry for having bad reflex inherited
> > > from a too long Windows music utilisation :)
> > > Promise I will make a desintoxication cure of graphical frontend !
> > > So as you said ecasound is a charm for this : 
> > > with this :
> > > ecasound -G:jack,recasound,notransport -i jack -o dubphil-live.wav
> > ecasound ...... -o dubphil-live-`date +%Y-%m%d-%H%M`.wav
> > -record for a while
> > -ctrl-c, up-arrow, enter
> >    starts a new file stamped with YYYY-MMDD-HHMM time stamp.
> > Not quite one key, but I find it fairly convenient. Though, I am not
> > using it in a live setting.
> I think you can do the same thing with timemachine, everytime you click
> stop it will start queuing, and you have 10 seconds to press record again
> without loosing anything.

even better. :)
-- 
Eric Dantan Rzewnicki  |  Systems Administrator
Technical Operations Division  |  Radio Free Asia
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