Well those are good ideas. That Ripflash is interesting. I hadn't seen that one. Also, a simple voice recorder would be fine, but not for what I want to do.
For a while now, I'm still going to need to record events like school concerts and such. I've been using my Archos Jukebox Recorder for the past semester, and I've been less than impressed with it.
For one, the software sucks. Quite unintuitive and the most buggy peice of crap that I've ever used. The hardware is decent, but sometimes the screen goes out of shift, and I havve to restart the player to get it working again.
The main problem is that the Archos isn't actually
good at recording. For some reason, they placed the line-in jack on the opposite side of the player from where the wire for that connection goes. So you've got this unshielded wire running across a hard disk. As you might imagine, you wind up with some extra churning and bubbling that doesn't usually show up in Holst. This is made even worse due to the fact that unlike the wonderful programmers at empeg, they didn't go to extra lengths to make sure the disk doesn't cache as often. It does so quite often. Kinda scary for a portable.
There is a solution for this, but it is, as many things are, costly. You see you really get the disk noise because you have to jack up the recording level to max in order to hear anything. Even then the pickup is so quiet the disk noise is far more prevelant than the thing you're trying to record. Basically, you need an amplifier. They sell ones for the Archos. For a measly $300 you get a mic and a little amp. Deal, huh? So for now, since I've been ideo taping these performances as well, I've been using the line-out on an old camcorder straight into the player. This wouldn't be so bad a solution if I didn't have all the extra setup hassles of another AC adapter, which is good to have in case the player craps out that day.
So here it is. I need:
-above average build quality
-good software
-large capacity
-internal amp (my portable MD recorder had one, why not these?)
That's about it. So far, looking at the recordable players out there, nothing matches my description. Now I'm basically looking for an iPod with recording capabilities and a built-in amp.
Oh, and believe me, it's a lot better for me to copy over an MP3 file than to re-record several hours of audio onto WAV on my computer.
Sorry for that long post