![]() Then press the green triangle to play it back. Press the yellow square to stop recording. Press the red button on Audacity and then play some music (or make some noise!). But before you start, use the Zoom Out to increase the display timescale to beyond the time that you expect to record (so that Audacity does not have to redraw the display and possibly drop some audio samples). Then move the Input volume: slider to the far right (full volume). ![]() ![]() Next, you have to raise the audio input level: Click the speaker icon at the upper right of the desktop screen and select Sound Preferences.|Input|(set the button for Blue Snowball). (actually, you can do all of these and then press OK) |Channels: 1(Mono)|OKĮdit|Preferences.|Recording|Sound Activated Recording|(check the box and set the level to -33db.|OKĮdit|Preferences.|Quality|Default Sample Format: (select 16-bit)|OK In general this should make it work in newer releases (If not it is a regression and should be considered a bug ) )Įdit|Preferences.|Devices|Recording|Device: Blue Snowball. ![]() It worked in 10.04 OOTB but you need to adjust some settings. ![]()
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