"Up until late 2002, there were no real MP3 encoders for the Pocket PC. This meant anyone that wanted to record on his or her PDA needed to resort to the built-in, either very wasteful, non-compressing WAV coders or (on the PPC2k2 platform; in PPC2k and earlier, there was another ultra-low-speed codec, the Mobile Voice, with even worse voice quality and smaller bandwidth usage) the GSM codec, which, being a heavy-compression vocoder, produced just intelligible results and was completely useless for recording for example meetings."
Pocket PC Thoughts reader, Menneisyys, has just put together an interesting article on many of today's sound recorders for the Pocket PC. If you're interested in finding out more about the ups and downs of each application, then this article is worth a read.
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"Furthermore, it's impossible to come up with a CF/SD card that would have direct sound feeding via the card bus to the inner hardware – the current card buses just don't support this kind of functionality. "
"Furthermore, it's impossible to come up with a CF/SD card that would have direct sound feeding via the card bus to the inner hardware – the current card buses just don't support this kind of functionality. "
Core sound makes a SPDIF CF card that can record up to 24 bit 96khz. It's used by a lot of pros in the industry.
Thanks for the feedback!
Note the word 'direct'. The Core card digitizes the audio, and only after that sends it over the CF bus. This is certainly possible because it's simple data communication. However, (it seems) it's impossible to send over any non-pre-digitized (that is, analog) signal over the CF bus - it's just not have a direct, analog PIN (or PIN's) to communicate analogue data with the outside world. If it had, someone would already have come up with a CF-based GSM card/radio/TV receiver/etc card that is also able to route its sound through the PDA.
I think the approach to make the A/D conversion in the CF or SD card is the best one since the converters will probably be better than the one inside pdas.
Note the word 'direct'. The Core card digitizes the audio, and only after that sends it over the CF bus.
This is not quite correct. PDAudio-CF accepts a digital audio signal -- it does not digitize.
PDAudio-CF accepts digital audio data streams up to 24-bit/192 KS/s, making it the smallest high-resolution digital audio recorder in the world. It records linear PCM with no data compression.
PDAudio is supported by Resco's Audio Recorder, Gidluck Mastering's Live2496 and Technica Del Arte's Luci.
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Len MoskowitzCore Sound -- Home of PDAudiowww.core-sound.com
This is not quite correct. PDAudio-CF accepts a digital audio signal -- it does not digitize.
Yes, indeed it's not the card itself (but the additional A/D converter) that digitizes the audio input. Thanks for pointing that I haven't been totally clear.
My point is still valid, however: only digital data can be sent through the CF bus, and not analogue.