No. You must use the line-in jack. You can use a stereo-to-mono adapter on the plug. I get better results from having the NLS tape player connected to a receiver and amplify the signal strength from the player to the sound card. It even makes the books sound better as well. I do everything in real time. I'm in no big hurry. When I get those projects done, I get them done in good time. Another reason I do it in real time is because sometimes a tape will be defective, and I want to be able to catch it as it comes up. I also like to divide extra-long segments into comfortable ones where I don't have to listen to it in its original length, meaning that if a passage is quite long, I will put the letter A, B, C, after my designated I D. When I play the book on another machine, it plays correctly with the numbered and lettered segments. The mic jack is not meant for line-in recording. Everyone else uses line-in on their sound cards.
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