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Reviewed in the United States on March 4, 2025
Cool device to have to make all of your older music collections digital. It was easy to setup and use. I highly recommend. Sound quality is also amazing. We'll worth the price.
ReviewingInMinnesota
Reviewed in the United States on March 2, 2025
It just doesn't work, too bad, we have a drawer full of cassettes and it would have been very useful!
Givadam
Reviewed in the United States on February 4, 2025
It did not sent sound to my computer, so I had to return it.
Dunbi
Reviewed in the United States on January 7, 2025
This has worked really well for us. We were able to go through old cassettes and transfer them with ease because of this device. It's awesome to be able to do this. A few years ago, I would've thought it was impossible, but this device makes it possible.
James Harmon
Reviewed in the United States on December 10, 2024
My wife has many cassette tapes from lectures that she wanted to save to digital files. The cassettes are getting old and I want to preserve them before they go bad. I have a cassette player from my old stereo system, but this converter was much easier to connect to my Mac Studio. This converter is small and reminds me of the old walkman cassette players. It can work as a walkman when you install two AA batteries. It has a small speaker and an earphone jack. It sounds a little tinny, but it does work. When you remove the AA batteries, you can connect it to your computer with a USB cable. It has a USB-C connection to power it and send digital audio to your computer. I used the Audacity program that the user manual recommended. This converter was recognized as an audio input source by Audacity, so it worked for recording the tapes. Audacity captured the sound and allowed easy exporting to MP3 or WAV. Operation was simple. Press record on Audacity and then press the play button on the converter. When the tape finishes, press the stop on Audacity. The process is simple, straightforward, easy to perform. I don't know how great the fidelity is for music, but this worked very well for speech.
brain freeze
Reviewed in the United States on November 27, 2024
I used to make and narrate or is the word dj? on mixed tapes. You know where you take one song off of an album and then another from another album and make a mixed tape? This was 80's. There are a couple of tapes that had me wishing a special someone a happy birthday or whatever. I wanted these tapes digitized to play "now." This device did what I needed and brought my old tapes back to life. Its not like I will digitize that many. But for the few that I do, this device is worth it. Pure nostalgia.
C
Reviewed in the United States on November 24, 2024
I got this because it looked as if it would be small, simple, and quickly convert old audio cassettes to digital format. I have a multi-function set-top converter that has never even been out of its box due to constraints of time and space. However, I've started worrying that the shelf life of my audio cassettes is about up, so I got this for a quick fix for backups until I get the other set up and running. So, this is definitely portable and small enough to not need its own area. That's the plus. The hardware itself seems good enough. The problem is it uses Audacity, which although free and open-source and of great repute, must be downloaded, installed, configured, and learned if you're not already familiar with it. There are pictures and directions in the instructions for using an older version of Audacity. However, without researching and digging for more information, the dissimilarities between the older and current version of Audacity make it too frustrating, complicated, and time-consuming to use this as a converter. It seems to serve okay as a player, but it's certainly not the quick fix I was hoping for.
City Slicker
Reviewed in the United States on November 23, 2024
Instructions, in #1 font, are for a PC with a cryptic statement that iOS would also work. NOT. Downloaded a driver clearly designed for a PC but went ahead followed the instructions for PC. downloaded the required Audacity app which should be the name of the company who designed this little product. Three hours later it was clear this hardware/software did not speak to my MacBook Pro. I could not even do the basic: "listen to a tape." What did happen was my first tape RRed when I pressed PLAY and I had to cut it to remove the end strip. But I forgave it. Checked that everything (driver and App) was loaded properly and put in another cassette tape I didn't care about. This time the cassette player wouldn't PLAY or do anything else. EZCAP does not provide a tele. # for tech support but you can email them to hear back within 24 hrs.
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