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- innovative technologies wrote:
- >
- > rgwillia@rockdal.aud.alcatel.com (Rick Williamson) wrote:
- >
- > >:rgwillia@rockdal.aud.alcatel.com (Rick Williamson) wrote:
- > >:I have a USR Sportster VI 28.8 internal modem with voice mail. The quality of
- > >:the recordings that I'm getting for the greeting and messages is questionable.
- > >: I'm hearing a faint motorboat type sound in the background. The messages
- > >:are understandable and the quality is definetly better than an answering
- > >:machine with magnetic tape but the background noise is kind of annoying. What
- > >:kind of sound quality are any of you who have voice mail modems getting? Is
- > >:this background noise typical or do you get crystal clear quality? Thanks for
- > >:any responses.
- > >:Interesting - my GVC-type 14.4 internal modem with voice mail has that
- > >:same faint motorboat sound, and superimposed on it is a faint trumpet
- > >:sound, in 2-second bursts with about 5-second gaps.
- >
- > Take a look at http://www.israel.net/innovative/ and you might find
- > some interesting info on the subject of Voice Modem quality...
- > best regards,
- > Innovative Technologiesvarious modems support various formats of sampling and compression, Win95 system
- on top of it seems to expand on that selection. Typically, there is a trade-off
- between the sound quality and disk storage space. The type of compression is another
- variable. The highest quality comes with the highest sampling rate and bits per sample.
-
- therefore, 16 bits per sample at 22.5KHz is nearly a CD quality. For for if the phone
- line limits you to less than 4KHz bandwidth? you canb drop either to a sample rate of
- 11.025KHz (8KHz, 7.2KHz...) or to 8 bits per sample. You will consume correspondingly
- less HD space.
-
- You can also employ various flavors of voice compression and still preserve what is
- called the toll-quality of recording. A 4-bit ADPCM, a 2bit ADPCM seem to be still
- adequate but be aware of the PCB layout which the product uses since that can
- underline your recordings with quite miserable background hiss, and all sorts of
- in-band rumble which no code revision will fix.
-
- Selecting a good chip maker is just a half of the problem. Cirrus Logic's previous
- voice chips were quite cheap for one reason - their voice operation was worthless,
- thus for free. Also, look for a good (and not cheap) end product maker, to add an
- equally important product integration for the final good sound quality.
-
- If you run under Win95, use 'multimedia' panel to route the sound playback to the
- integrated sound system or to a sound card (most systems today have either one). If
- the playback of recording contiues to sound bad, your voice modem definitely sucks.
-
- Also, select a modem whose audio formats are widely supported by your chosen host
- com package/system. AT&T's GSM is nowhere to be found, as an example. Finally,
- evaluate the support and robustness of the INF file for Unimodem V release (needed
- for 32-bit apps under Win95).
-
- I never had a sound-quality concern with any of the above schemes, unless there was
- a legitimate problem with a chip set, modem layout, overall setup. The quality
- should be way superior to a tape-based machine.
-
- regards,
- vc_lant
-