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#1
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REQ: Need help activating Microphone recording.
I have the ASUS P4B533-VM MOBO (2.4 P4), and just now decided to try
the microphone. I was surprised to find that it seems to be dead. I have a desktop icon for 'sound recorder' (sndrec32.exe), but it doesn't seem to allow recording (no audio spikes). I had no problem with W98. Yes the mic is connected to mic port on rear (at least it seems to be). How can I determine wherein the problem lies? I looked at Device Manager, but all looks okay there (to me). Does XP have some special setting that I need to activate? Thanks |
#2
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wrote in message ... I have the ASUS P4B533-VM MOBO (2.4 P4), and just now decided to try the microphone. I was surprised to find that it seems to be dead. I have a desktop icon for 'sound recorder' (sndrec32.exe), but it doesn't seem to allow recording (no audio spikes). I had no problem with W98. Yes the mic is connected to mic port on rear (at least it seems to be). How can I determine wherein the problem lies? I looked at Device Manager, but all looks okay there (to me). Does XP have some special setting that I need to activate? I'm not sure about XP, but on Win98 there is a utility called Volume Control (SNDVOL32.EXE). Start = Programs = Accessories = Entertainment If you fire it up and then do a Options = Properties, there will (should) be a list titled "Show the following volume controls." Locate Microphone and ensure it is checked. If it was unchecked and you now have it checked, back out on the Volume Control screen is a control for the Microphone. By default, it is set to Mute. Uncheck the Mute box and you should have a working microphone. You can test it without SNDREC32's assistance and sound picked up through the microphone should play through the speakers. (Tweak the volume level for the microphone, if necessary. Too high a setting will cause feedback.) |
#3
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On Sat, 15 Nov 2003 15:11:56 GMT, "MyndPhlyp"
wrote: I'm not sure about XP, but on Win98 there is a utility called Volume Control (SNDVOL32.EXE). Start = Programs = Accessories = Entertainment If you fire it up and then do a Options = Properties, there will (should) be a list titled "Show the following volume controls." Locate Microphone and ensure it is checked. If it was unchecked and you now have it checked, back out on the Volume Control screen is a control for the Microphone. By default, it is set to Mute. Uncheck the Mute box and you should have a working microphone. You can test it without SNDREC32's assistance and sound picked up through the microphone should play through the speakers. (Tweak the volume level for the microphone, if necessary. Too high a setting will cause feedback.) What you say is true for W98 and the same microphone works just fine using 'recorder' on same speakers. In WXP, I don't think speech is installed, but the XP helps on the subject say the following: To install speech recognition using Add or Remove Programs Open Add or Remove Programs in Control Panel. Click Change or Remove Programs, click Microsoft Office XP, and then click Change. Click Add or Remove Features, and then click Next. Under Features to install, double-click Office Shared Features. Double-click Alternative User Input, click Speech, click the down arrow, and then click Run from My Computer. Click Update Guess what? I don't have Microsoft Office XP as described above (small wonder since I don't have Office). Now what do I do? Thanks |
#4
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wrote in message news In WXP, I don't think speech is installed, but the XP helps on the subject say the following: To install speech recognition using Add or Remove Programs Open Add or Remove Programs in Control Panel. Click Change or Remove Programs, click Microsoft Office XP, and then click Change. Click Add or Remove Features, and then click Next. Under Features to install, double-click Office Shared Features. Double-click Alternative User Input, click Speech, click the down arrow, and then click Run from My Computer. Click Update Guess what? I don't have Microsoft Office XP as described above (small wonder since I don't have Office). Now what do I do? Maybe an SDK or one of these other downloads? http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/r...DisplayLang=en Somewhere along the line, I ended up with the speech recognition add-on on my Win2K + Office2K systems, so it isn't just an OfficeXP thing. It might have been part of an IE update, but it doesn't appear as a separate component when I go through the Add/Remove Software applet on the Control Panel. |
#5
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On Sat, 15 Nov 2003 18:26:56 GMT, "MyndPhlyp"
wrote: Maybe an SDK or one of these other downloads? http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/r...DisplayLang=en Somewhere along the line, I ended up with the speech recognition add-on on my Win2K + Office2K systems, so it isn't just an OfficeXP thing. It might have been part of an IE update, but it doesn't appear as a separate component when I go through the Add/Remove Software applet on the Control Panel. I tried SDK - still no mike (sound recording). It acts as if the mike is dead or the mike port it is connected to. So, I temporarily switched my XP HD with a W98 HD I borrowed, just to test that my hardware is okay otherwise - found that the mike worked just fine. Therefore my on-board sound must be okay as well as the mike port. It sure seems strange to me that a system as all-powerful as XP is making it so hard to implement this simple hardware feature. Finding the setting-windows is hard enough, but even after I found them, I find no way to get XP to recognize my mike even though it allows me to set the mike options/volume. So, obviously I am missing something here. I do have to say this on that - the various sndvol32 files (4) were not under c:\windows\system32 where I think they are supposed to be. They were among many files 'moved' to windows\lastgood by unknown Gods sometime in the past. Many of those files were the games that came with XP. When I discovered that, I moved the games and sndvol32 files back to c:\windows\system32 . Only then could I work with 'Sound Recorder'. This all raises the question - is whatever I need for the microphone also in this nefarious 'lastgood' directory, and what might it be? Alas, that just might be the big question. Thanks |
#6
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wrote in message news I tried SDK - still no mike (sound recording). It acts as if the mike is dead or the mike port it is connected to. So, I temporarily switched my XP HD with a W98 HD I borrowed, just to test that my hardware is okay otherwise - found that the mike worked just fine. Therefore my on-board sound must be okay as well as the mike port. It sure seems strange to me that a system as all-powerful as XP is making it so hard to implement this simple hardware feature. Finding the setting-windows is hard enough, but even after I found them, I find no way to get XP to recognize my mike even though it allows me to set the mike options/volume. So, obviously I am missing something here. I do have to say this on that - the various sndvol32 files (4) were not under c:\windows\system32 where I think they are supposed to be. They were among many files 'moved' to windows\lastgood by unknown Gods sometime in the past. Many of those files were the games that came with XP. When I discovered that, I moved the games and sndvol32 files back to c:\windows\system32 . Only then could I work with 'Sound Recorder'. This all raises the question - is whatever I need for the microphone also in this nefarious 'lastgood' directory, and what might it be? Alas, that just might be the big question. Just for grins: In the Control Panel, is there an applet called Text Services? If so, Double-click Text Services. In the Installed Services section, if Voice Recognition is not in the list, click the Add button and add it. Back out to the Text Services dialog box, highlight the Voice Recognition service and click the Properties button. In the (new) Speech Properties dialog box, click the Audio Input button. Click the "Use this audio input device" radio button and select your sound board's device. (It might be defaulting to something else.) While still in the Audio Input Settings dialog box, click the Properties button. In the (new) Advanced Audio Properties, click the "Use this audio input line" radio button and select Microphone from the list. OK back to the Audio Input Settings dialog box. OK back to the Speech Properties dialog box and click the Configure Microphone button and go through the Wizard. I recall that, when the Text Services got added to my system, the microphone was initially disabled. Not really disabled, but rather not the selected device for speech recognition. Once I discovered the Text Services applet on the Control Panel and started playing around with the settings, I found that the Modem, not the Microphone, was selected as the input source. Again, I'm not sure when Text Services and Speech Recognition got added to the system. It might have been IE6 and it might have been an Office XP patch that got loaded when I installed FrontPage 2002. I'm pretty sure it wasn't a Windows update, though. (All-powerful XP? The only user interface designed by The Cartoon Network? One thing Micro$oft forgot to do with XP is to include the Looney Tunes theme songs for the startup and shutdown. g) |
#7
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On Sun, 16 Nov 2003 16:59:27 GMT, "MyndPhlyp"
wrote: Just for grins: In the Control Panel, is there an applet called Text Services? No - but there are 'speech recognition' and 'text to speech' tabs under a 'speech' icon. If so, Double-click Text Services. Can't do it of course. In the Installed Services section, if Voice Recognition is not in the list, click the Add button and add it. Under the above mentioned 'speech recognition, there is a 'recognition profile'. Is that the same thing? Back out to the Text Services dialog box, highlight the Voice Recognition service and click the Properties button. In the (new) Speech Properties dialog box, click the Audio Input button. Click the "Use this audio input device" radio button and select your sound board's device. (It might be defaulting to something else.) While still in the Audio Input Settings dialog box, click the Properties button. In the (new) Advanced Audio Properties, click the "Use this audio input line" radio button and select Microphone from the list. OK back to the Audio Input Settings dialog box. OK back to the Speech Properties dialog box and click the Configure Microphone button and go through the Wizard. At the bottom of my 'speech properties' window, microphone is shown with a 'button' to 'configure' the microphone. When I do that, it wants me to adjust the microphone volume and presents a test for me to do so - but the test hangs because it doesn't detect my voice. So I have to quit that. Beside the 'configure' button I have 'Audio input', and when I select it I get 'Audio input settings' and when I choose it, I can choose 'use this audio input device' and when I choose that I can select 'Intel integrated audio' which should be the on-board audio on my ASUS P4B533-VM MOBO. But even when I do all that, 'configure' will not detect my voice on the mike. hheellllppppp. Thanks I recall that, when the Text Services got added to my system, the microphone was initially disabled. Not really disabled, but rather not the selected device for speech recognition. Once I discovered the Text Services applet on the Control Panel and started playing around with the settings, I found that the Modem, not the Microphone, was selected as the input source. Again, I'm not sure when Text Services and Speech Recognition got added to the system. It might have been IE6 and it might have been an Office XP patch that got loaded when I installed FrontPage 2002. I'm pretty sure it wasn't a Windows update, though. (All-powerful XP? The only user interface designed by The Cartoon Network? One thing Micro$oft forgot to do with XP is to include the Looney Tunes theme songs for the startup and shutdown. g) |
#8
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wrote in message ... ...snipped... Arghh! It sounds like you have the bits installed. It's just a matter of discovering where in that rat's maze Microsoft has the input device pointing to something other than the frickin' microphone. Here ... wait a minute ... just flip this message over so that I can see your screen. Maybe I can find it. (You'll have to hold the mouse up to the screen so's I can navigate, too!) Sorry, but without an XP machine at my disposal, I'm just not going to be able to walk you through it. Best of luck. |
#9
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On Sun, 16 Nov 2003 20:23:09 GMT, "MyndPhlyp"
wrote: Arghh! It sounds like you have the bits installed. It's just a matter of discovering where in that rat's maze Microsoft has the input device pointing to something other than the frickin' microphone. Here ... wait a minute ... just flip this message over so that I can see your screen. Maybe I can find it. (You'll have to hold the mouse up to the screen so's I can navigate, too!) Sorry, but without an XP machine at my disposal, I'm just not going to be able to walk you through it. Best of luck. Thanks anyway. For not having XP in front of you, you did good. I figure it's not your fault, but XP's. I guess I'll just conclude that XP does not provide sound recording to the layman. |
#10
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On Sun, 16 Nov 2003 20:23:09 GMT, "MyndPhlyp"
wrote: Arghh! It sounds like you have the bits installed. It's just a matter of discovering where in that rat's maze Microsoft has the input device pointing to something other than the frickin' microphone. Here ... wait a minute ... just flip this message over so that I can see your screen. Maybe I can find it. (You'll have to hold the mouse up to the screen so's I can navigate, too!) Sorry, but without an XP machine at my disposal, I'm just not going to be able to walk you through it. Best of luck. I found this web site showing the identical problem w/no solution. Glad to know I am not alone I guess. http://www.windowsxpuser.com/forums/...ic=957&forum=6 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Thanks anyway. For not having XP in front of you, you did good. I figure it's not your fault, but XP's. I guess I'll just conclude that XP does not provide sound recording to the layman. |
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