Have you found a song you really like, but not enough to buy it?
Burn A Copy Of Any DVD with FREE Software
DRM, or Digital Rights Management, is the technology used by Movie Studios and Record Companies to protect their intellectual property. However, it is largely ineffective when it comes to your computer. I have not found a DVD yet that could not be cracked by a defunct, yet absolutely effective little program called DVD Decrypter. I simple google search will assist you there. That program along with DVD Shrink, will enable you to copy any DVD you’ve purchased to a blank disk (for backup purposes only, of course).
In The Audio Realm, The FREE Program Audacity Makes It Easy.
In the Video Tutorial Below, I’ll Show you how to record any song on the Internet. Watch:
To Pirate or Not to Pirate
To me, pirating is mass production of copyright material and unauthorized sale of that property. If you buy a CD or DVD, that intellectual property becomes yours for personal use. If you want to protect your investment by making a backup copy of something you already paid for, you should not be considered a criminal for doing it.
If you make copies and sell them, however, you should be fried and I’ll be happy to provide the lighter.
Convert your favorite cassette audio tapes to your iPod – for FREE
If you have music, spoken word or other audio on cassette and want to listen to it on your iPod, it’s easy and FREE to do.
Tools:
Cassette Deck or Player
Computer
Audio Recording Program
Audio Cables
Step 1-
Open your Audio Recording program. I’ll be using Audacity, which is a FREE audio recording program that has lots of features. You can download it HERE. Download, install and open Audacity, and set the input to Line In or Microphone, depending on whether you plug into the back or front of your computer.
Step 2-
Plug your Tape Deck or Tape Player into y0ur computer. Use a RCA to Headphone (Stereo Mini) audio cable for a Tape Deck:
Or a Stereo Headphone cable for Cassetter Player:
Plug the audio cable into either the Line (blue) input on the back of your computer or if you have a Mic (pink) input on the front, use that.
Step 3-
Press Play on your cassette deck or player, then click the round red Record button on Audacity. Once the song or other audio has finished, press Stop (obvious right). Go to File and Export MP3 and you’re done.
Notes:
You may need to adjust the volume on your computer (not your speakers) for the best possible results. Raising the volume level a few notches under distortion is usually best, just watch out for peaks in the audio.
Audacity has lots of features to improve the sound quality of your recordings. Save a copy of one song or recording just to play around with.
You can use the same process to record audio from video tapes on your VCR.
If you change the input on Audacity to “Stereo Mix” you can record audio from internet radio or any music or video you play online.