1. Our technical specifications
    1. Quick Facts!
    2. Why do we require specific technical settings?
    3. But using other sample rates than 44.1 kHz is better suited to voice recording, isn't it?
    4. What do the specifications mean?
      1. File Format
      2. Sample Frequency
      3. Sample Size
    5. Further information (WWW Links)
    6. A Short Course in Digital Audio
    7. Primer on PC Audio
    8. Guide for audiobook narrators

Our technical specifications

Quick Facts!

If you know how to do it, please submit final contributions with the following parameters.

If you don't know how to do that, don't despair. Check out the sections about editing (Audacity, GarageBand) for more information, post your file to the Listeners and Editors wanted forum, or tell the book coordinator that you are unsure so s/he can check. In most cases the files will be fine! :-)

(Record a test if you're uncertain.) LibriVox is about books! Not about technical specifications.

Why do we require specific technical settings?

But using other sample rates than 44.1 kHz is better suited to voice recording, isn't it?

What do the specifications mean?

File Format

Sample Frequency

Sample Size

Further information (WWW Links)

A Short Course in Digital Audio

A program which runs under MS Windows; the file size is 4.4 MBytes.

Upload new attachment "a_short_course_in_digital_audio__narrated_animation.exe" (by Syntrillium Software Corp., the originator of Cool Edit) is a narrated animation which introduces the concepts of analog audio (sound waves and their graphical representation, conversion to a electrical signal by a microphone, and analog recording and playback) and digital audio (digitizing or sampling, Wave files, and PC sound cards).

Note that the hyper-links and references within the course to the Cool Edit and Syntrillium Web sites are obsolete (since Cool Edit is now Adobe Audition). And that the brief discussion of MIDI files is not relevant to LibriVox.

Primer on PC Audio

The Primer on PC Audio (by High Criteria, the producer of Total Recorder) covers much of the same material as the Short Course above, but in written form. It also discusses compression formats, such as MP3.

Note that the primer covers material (such as Transfer of Audio from LPs and Cassettes to CDs) which is not relevant to LibriVox.

Guide for audiobook narrators

Free online book for new narrators at Read By The Author dot com

Also goes into issues involved in editing and doing retakes.

TechSpecs (last edited 2007-09-03 06:08:22 by AnitaroyDobbs)