But for greater flexibility there are a few more pieces that can be helpful. Grab a microphone, some headphones, and fire up Adobe Audition – we’re going to podcast! Get A Microphone Audition has defaults in place to get you up and recording quickly, but it will most likely be using your computer’s default, tiny, built-in microphone.Ī decent computer, maybe an interface, a pair of headphones, and an internet connection might be all one needs. This would then mean you DAW software will see your two seperate mics as two tracks and Skype would see the interface as your mic input for comms. So two mics connect via XLR to interface which then connects to Mac via USB. Where you host your audio and feed files is up to you, and as with many technical options, you can host it all yourself, or use a paid service such as. Create a podcast feed A podcast is, in essence, a series of audio files, that contains metadata on the feed itself, and metadata on each episode that references the audio file you created above. I personally upload uncompressed AIFFs to Soundcloud as I can download the originals at any time for other use. If you use a Podcasting service (as opposed to hosting yourself) then they will handle the conversion process for you, so the upload format is not so important. All the audio editors I mentioned above will allow you to export to a variety of formats. MP3 is fine, but an old () format and I suggest something else like. Of course, it’s best you pick something that is a common format and compressed to allow for better distribution on the web.
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