On Thu, Jun 18, 2020 at 3:37 AM Ed Greshko <ed.greshko(a)greshko.com> wrote:
On 2020-06-18 15:07, Samuel Sieb wrote:
> On 6/17/20 11:40 PM, Joe Zeff wrote:
>> On 06/11/2020 10:15 PM, Tim via users wrote:
>>> Try recording yourself to a file (e.g. use Audacity). Does it sound
>>> clear? If not, check your mike gain isn't wound up excessively high,
>>> wiggle leads and connectors, see if you can find a fault with your mic
>>> that you can make come and go.
>>
>> Sorry for the delay on this. I've installed Audacity on my laptop and tried
to make a recording. I've got the internal mike set at the default setting, and when
I test it in the Settings of Zoom, it looks like it's working, but I can't get any
response from Audacity or make it play back what I've just said. I've followed
the tutorials, but absolutely nothing! Am I supposed to save my test and then play it
back?
>
> The interface is a little confusing and the toolbars can be moved around, so
I'll assume the default layout that I have is the same as yours.
>
> To the right of the play control buttons, there are two rows. On the second row,
there are microphone and speaker icons. To the left of the microphone is where you can
pick which input to use. Below the play control icons is a microphone and to the right of
that is a meter which says "Click to Start Monitoring". If you click that, you
should see the level of the microphone input. If you don't see any activity try other
input options.
>
> Once you have activity, then you can click the red record button and it should
create a new track and start showing the waveform as it's recording. Stop when you
have enough and then you can play it back.
In the original post he mentioned, "If I use the internal speakers and mic, the
sound is sometimes OK, sometimes not. However, I'm told that there's so much
static from my mic that the host mutes me before I can even say one, single word."
Late reply but I believe you can set Zoom up so that you need to
press a button, such as space bar or something less popular to turn
the mic on.
Also in our club we were testing jitsi instead of Zoom and it worked
fine for us.
Joe, about the Y-adapter I do not know its history, or even the
headset for that matters, so I cannot say if the cable is split in
either of them. At home I use headphones I grab at conferences and the
internal laptop microphone; none of those headphones last for a year
before I lose one of the sides. Only a multimeter would tell for sure.
Meanwhile my crappy $10 Dell-brand headset (which I bought because of
the noise cancelling mic) with separate jacks for mic and headphones
is still chugging along (I took it to work) while flaking its faux
leather on my ears and shirt.
I found that would happen if one has the input level set too high in
pavcontrol. What is shown in audacity doesn't
appear to reflect the settings in audacity.
I have pavcontrol set to 40%~45% and it sounds fine. Well, except for the fact that the
laptop is old and the mic
is "substandard" and not well isolated as it picks up fan vibrations.
Old laptop could also mean corrosion and cracks on solder
bridges due to cycling and flexing.
> --
> The key to getting good answers is to ask good questions.
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