| The Professional Plan and higher
accounts include the use of the popular RealAudio server.
STEP 1: CREATE A SOUND FILE
If the sound file that you want to make into a RealAudio
file is already saved on your computer you can skip
to step 2.
If you want to create a sound file from an external
source (e.g. your CD player, VCR, or Microphone),
you can use a program called Sound Recorder which
comes with Windows95 and Windows98 (usually located
in the Windows directory as "Sndrec32.exe")
or you can download an audio editing program called
Cool Edit which is available in shareware and full
release versions. You will need to consult your sound
card manual to learn how to send audio from your source
into the computer.
For best results, encode the audio in the highest
possible setting (16-bit 44.1MHz). Consult the software's
documentation to find out how to make these settings.
The RealAudio Encoder will eventually compress it
down, so it is recommended to start with the highest
quality source.
Once you create the sound file, save it as either
a .wav, .au, or .pcm file.
STEP 2: ACQUIRE THE REALAUDIO SOFTWARE
In order to create and listen to RealAudio files,
you will need to download and install the RealAudio
Player and RealAudio Encoder from the RealAudio web
site. RealAudio offers a full version of their software
which affords better quality playback and may include
other features.
STEP 3: TURNING YOUR SOUND FILE INTO A REALAUDIO
FILE
Follow theses steps to create a RealAudio file:
- Open the RealAudio Encoder program.
- Select the file that you want to encode by hitting
the "Browse" button.
- Select the sound file (e.g. .wav, .au, .pcm).
- Select the desired compression and file name on
the right side of the screen.
(e.g. "14.4 Mono",
"28.8 Mono", "28.8 Stereo",
and "ISDN")
- Select START ENCODING from the Encode menu at
the top of the screen.
- The original sound file will be scanned and copied
to a compressed format. You have just created an
RA file.
** Important **
Do NOT use underscore ("_") characters when
naming RA files as they will not be interpreted correctly
by the .ram file.
STEP 4: UPLOAD THE .RA FILE TO YOUR WEB SITE
Upload the .ra file to the root directory of your
web site in binary transfer mode.
STEP 5: CREATING THE .RAM FILE
You need to create a text file with a ".ram"
extension. This text file contains a URL to the RealAudio
file in the following format:
http://www.yourdomain.com/audiofilename.ra
Substitute your domain name above. This file can
reside in the root directory of your account. The
audio file name must have a ".ra" extension.
Once the .ram text file is created, save it and upload
it to your web site in ASCII transfer mode. We suggest
using the same file naming convention. (e.g. "test.ram"
will launch the "test.ra" file)
STEP 6: CREATING THE HTML CODE FOR THE REAL
AUDIO FILE
The HTML document does NOT reference the .ra file
itself; it must call the .ram file which, in turn,
launches the RealAudio file as represented below.
<a href="http://yourdomain.com/textfile.ram">Listen
to Audio</a>
If you reference the .ra file directly from your
HTML code, the audio file may play, but you will not
benefit from the streaming audio effect.
STEP 7: EMBEDDING A REALAUDIO FILE
You will also have the option of embedding a RealAudio
file so that the .ra file will begin playing as soon
as the html page loads. This way, the web visitor
will not have to click on a link to hear your sound
file.
To do this, make a copy of your .ram file and resave
it as a .rpm file and upload to the same directory
as the .ram .
Then, reference the new .rpm within the page's html
like this:
<EMBED SRC="yourfile.rpm"
WIDTH=250 HEIGHT=35 CONTROLS=ControlPanel AUTOSTART=TRUE>
More information for putting RealAudio files on your
page is available at http://service.real.com/.
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