Shary,

It's not compression but setting the channels to mono (or mono-stereo - same
channel on both sides) and lowering the Frequency of sampling, the Hz range
down to 22 or 11 will give you clean uncompressed sound, good enough for
voice. 

BTW, the quicktime will shield you from the noise and play the sample
correctly but QT required.

cheers
Xavier 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Shari
> Sent: Wednesday, June 15, 2005 13:49
> To: Discussions on Metacard
> Subject: Re: .wav and .aiff files
> 
> >I use "Audacity":
> >
> >http://audacity.sourceforge.net/
> >
> >it's free and working :-)
> >
> >Please remember to ONLY use uncompressed wav/aiff files if you are 
> >going to "play" them in MC.
> >
> >Hope that helps.
> 
> Yes, I discovered that one!  I tried compression and lordy 
> lordy, the results blew my ears out!
> 
> But still it's good to save the file in a way that makes it 
> smaller than 200-300K.  Gosh I've got one set of sounds for 
> sale that has over 300 recordings.  Size matters, the smaller 
> the better!
> 
> I will try out Audacity.  Thanks for the tip.  Will keep you 
> posted....
> 
> Shari
> --
> Mac and Windows shareware games
> http://www.gypsyware.com
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