Hello,

You should have a look at EMMS. It's suite easy to setup on linux. But if
you are using a MS Windows OS, it does requiert more settings. But
everything you light ne controlable within Emacs.

Regards,

Basile
Le 3 févr. 2015 06:27, "Russell Adams" <rlad...@adamsinfoserv.com> a écrit :

> On Mon, Feb 02, 2015 at 11:23:25PM -0600, Bill White wrote:
> > Today I was looking for a tool to ease my transcription of a recording
> > of a half-hour appointment with a doctor.
> >
> > Googling led to https://transcribe.wreally.com/ for the job - it really
> > works well, and it seems like something orgmode should be able to do.
> >
> > The idea is to unite a media player with a text-editing window.  Certain
> > commands issued *while in the text window* will operate on the media
> > player: pause, go back or ahead 2 seconds, slow down, speed up, etc.
> > Uniting the two eliminates constant switching between a media player and
> > a text editor - it's all integrated and controllable without switching
> > windows.
> >
> > From
> https://transcribe.wreally.com/guide/how-to-transcribe-audio-interviews-faster/
> > > The advantage of using Transcribe over a conventional text editor +
> > > media player approach is that you don’t have to lift your hands-off
> > > the keyboard at all. You can control the audio with your keyboard
> > > while simultaneously typing into the built-in text editor.
> >
> > Could orgmode do something like that?
>
> I don't see why not. Emacs could, or perhaps your audio program or
> window manager. I use xbindkeys and a few commands to control mpd
> (music daemon) and skip tracks, change volume, etc. Emacs has
> frontends to the same.
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------
> Russell Adams                            rlad...@adamsinfoserv.com
>
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