There is no doubt that this article is for you. It's easy to use, comfortable, good quality, and somewhat invisible (people don't even know it's a voice recorder). The price seems to have gone up, although there are plenty of used ones in mint condition if you're willing to ditch them. I have this model as well as a more expensive model that actually transfers data to a PC via a USB cable. I think to break up and sell the VN-1000 I don't need 2 radio tape recorders. What to do with records if this model does not transfer to PC? Well, it can transmit more like a dub, so to speak, with a 1/8" jack cable that plugs into your ear jack and into your audio jack, just like any other non-USB device (certainly not a 1/4" as stated in the previous poster this size is for guitars and some headphones etc.) To be honest my other model with USB connection requires a special Olympus program which is quite difficult to keep track of at least it works. On my VN-960PC, you can't transfer audio files from this device via USB using any other program, your computer doesn't even recognize the device without Olympus' little transfer program, the transfer is very slow, and I've never used the files after I filled out my notes even though I thought I would use them again one day. Or you can just delete the files on the voice recorder and they're gone. The delete function is int uitiv, like all functions of this over the voice recorder. I used both models extensively as an undergraduate and graduate student, recording lectures and taking small notes so I could actually listen to the lectures and then come back to them. later and fill in parts for great notes. As I tell my students now, in my experience, students don't memorize everything in the classroom, so notes are required! This recorder is similar to a flash drive, you can just put it in your pocket. And you'll probably only miss 4-5 seconds of audio if you pull it out and press record because it's that simple. One thing I don't recommend is that trying to record the VN-1000 with the VN-960PC sounded terrible because it picked up every nuance of the crackling, distorted noise. And it was a direct connection from the 1/8" plug of one ear port to the 1/8" plug of the other mic port. I was recording an interview with my grandmother so I synced the audio to my computer via the audio connectors to edit the tracks - everything worked fine. I used to hook up my mini tape recorder and cassette player the same way to convert analog audio files to digital.
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