[HPforGrownups] Re:Tapes/copyright (semi-OT) and the joy of HP on Audio
Denise
gypsycaine at yahoo.com
Fri Sep 22 21:05:11 UTC 2000
No: HPFGUIDX 1910
Why not buy a "plugable" tape player for the car? There are several now that may help you listen as you go! (I plan to buy, upgrade to a dual system if I get the chance--both cd and tape player deck evidently!)
Dee
----- Original Message -----
From: Vicki Merriman
To: HPforGrownups at egroups.com
Sent: Friday, September 22, 2000 4:55 PM
Subject: [HPforGrownups] Re:Tapes/copyright (semi-OT) and the joy of HP on Audio
My Groups | HPforGrownups Main Page | Start a new group!
--- In HPforGrownups at egroups.com, "Tandy, Heidi"
<heidi.h.tandy.c92 at a...> wrote:
use - so here's my > I Am A Copyright Lawyer comment on the issues:>
3. You can make a copy of a cd or tape or record for your OWN use, but
> cannot give that copy to someone else. I once read an article where
So it sounds as though I could take my HP cassette tapes and get a
friend to burn them onto CDs so that I could continue to play them in
my new car which will have a CD player but no cassette player without
having to reinvest in all four books on CD.
HOWEVER, I could not then give or sell the cassettes legally to
anyone else. I have to keep them as an archival form. sorry Brooks.
On the other hand, another friend pointed out that a cassette to CD
transfer would take time, money for the writable CDs and produce a
product with a fair amount of hiss. Plus, unless cd players now come
with a memory of where on the CD you are, I would need to relocate
the place each time I started the car or babysit the transfer
creating my own CD sections. Hmm, when all is said and done, it
might not be worth the time, expense etc.
If the CDs were available at Sams or another store as a discount as
good as the discount on the cassettes, I would just reinvest in them
on CD. Thus far, however, neither Brooks nor I have found any great
discounts on the CDs. They are definitely harder to find and more
expensive.
I am going to have to do something, as I love listening to the tapes
in the car. Jim Dale does such a great job as a dramatic reading and
really adds to the book. When book five comes out, I will definitely
buy it both in book and CD form and would highly recommend them to
anyone who spends much time in their car by themselves.
There was a brief discussion several weeks ago on Jim Dale v. the
English reader of the tapes, and I have to say now that, IMO, Jim
Dale wins hands down. My Dad bought books one and two on tape in
England (which is astonishing in and of itself) and that is how I had
the English book one to listen to on tape. The English reader is
decent, even good at some characters, but his female voices are very
bad and overall Jim Dale does a much better dramatic rendition of the
books. The one thing the English version has is the correct title of
the book (IMO) and the correct pronunciation of Hermione. The
English reader is easy for an american ear to understand; there is no
accent problem at all, but he just doesn't do it as well as Jim Dale
did it. If you are given a choice, I recommend you buy the Jim Dale
audio tapes over the English audio tapes.
Vicki
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