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I have yet to hear a phone or Skype interview (usually in
a podcast, but they also exist in regular radio programs)
that sounds like a studio interview or an interview in
which all participants are in the same location. This is
because VoIP generally doesn't sound good and has to
prioritize
timely delivery over audio quality (which is
understandable).
This software would allow you to conduct your interview
via Skype (or other VoIP system) with multiple
participants and cache a local copy of the audio in
uncompressed form at every location. It would also
insert timestamps into the recorded audio and then allow
one (or more) of the parties to synchonize the
uncompressed audio at whatever speed the network
allows and automatically generate one mp3 (or WAV,
etc.) file that sounds as good as possible for later use in
a podcast (or a regular broadcast).
The same principle could also be used with a phone
interview if the remote participant was able to record
his own audio during the interview and send it along via
the network for later synchronization. The latter case
would have to rely on waveform matching by the
software to create an in-sync audio image of the final
interview.
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