On 9/29/2009 3:47 AM India Time, _Rivjot_ wrote:

> Featuring Suzanne & Sonu Nigam only - 
> http://www.bollywoodhungama.com/movies/audiolisting/13837/index.html
> 
> I hope T-Series release it on some comipilation CD or something
> 

How to record that streaming...

Hmm, my already known/ installed media capture/download tools didn't work, so I 
had to use this new one. You can try this free tool.

http://www.applian.com/asktoolbar/
Applian's Ask and Record toolbar

download and install it (File ATBSetup.exe 8.39 MB)

It is supposed to install a toolbar in your ie and ff, though it added only in 
my ie but not in ff because ff was already running.

Now, there would an Ask toolbar appearing in ie. First go to "settings" and set 
the directory/ folder where you want the recorded song to be saved or it will 
save it deep somewhere in window's confusing folder schema.

I started ie, opened the above url given by Rivjot in ie, "tick" marked the 
song.
clicked on "play selected song", a new window opens showing the player, as I 
would do for normal streaming playing.

Now, click on "Record Audio" from the from the Ask toolbar. A window will open 
showing "waiting for audio" and with a button "Stop recording".

Now, go to the player window in ie and click on "play" button, the song will 
start streaming and playing and the Ask toolbar will keep on recording it.

Once the entire song plays and completes, the player will stop but the recorder 
will not know that the song is finished so it will continue waiting for more, 
so you have to click on ask window to "stop recording".

that's all. Now see the list of files that have got recorded. There seems to be 
a bug that it breaks the recorded mp3 into different files wherever there was 
some gap in streaming or for some reasons, so you might find 3 or 4 files 
having parts of that song. Though if you put them in sequence in your winamp or 
other player they would play the full song seamlessly in continuation, try this.

Open the MS Dos command window, (Start - Run - cmd.exe (enter)

Go to the folder where the file pieces are saved. (or from windows explorer, 
move the pieces from that folder to some convieniently accessible folder like 
c:\)

The names of the file pieces will be something like
Tue Sep 29 12;18;18 2009.mp3
Tue Sep 29 12;21;32 2009.mp3
Tue Sep 29 12;21;34 2009.mp3

just give the command 
copy tue*.mp3/b chiggy1.mp3/b

that will combine the files (b for binary addition) and you will get a single 
file named chiggy1.mp3 having the entire song.
--

The toolbar is supposed to download videos and even convert audio, video, pics 
to various formats. You can explore that further. 

This is just a tool and tip and trick. Take care of copyright and piracy 
issues. For this particular song, I don't thing they are likely to release its 
audio commercially, so I think you can take some freedom to use the recording 
non-commercially, for personal listening.

Thanks.
--
Rawat

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