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Audio Adapters Replace What Apple Omitted

Tech 101 | Mac Focus

May 03, 2001|JIM HEID, jim@jimheid.com

Apple was the first personal computer company to build sound-recording circuitry into its products. Macs have been able to record digital audio since 1990, back when Microsoft Windows' sonic repertoire went something like this: beep.

Apple recently chalked up another first: It has become the first computer company to remove sound-recording hardware from its products. Many of the newest Macs, including the Power Mac G4 towers, the iBook and the PowerBook G4, lack recording circuitry and audio-input jacks. In an era when virtually all Windows computers include sound-recording circuitry--and when computers are commonly being connected to stereo systems and musical instruments--Apple has taken a trip back to 1989.


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But hey, it's probably saving $1.63 per computer in manufacturing costs.

Audio gurus will quickly point out that the Mac's sound-recording circuitry wasn't up to professional standards. They're right. But many people don't need or can't afford pro-quality audio. The Mac's built-in audio hardware was more than adequate for amateur musicians, for school music labs and for users who wanted to try out the Mac OS's speech-recognition features or Internet telephony products.

Several third-party manufacturers have stepped in to fill the void. I tested a sampling of products ranging from $35 to $895. Although numerous audio cards are available that plug into a Power Mac's PCI expansion slots, I concentrated on external products that connect to a Mac's Universal Serial Bus, or USB, port--and thus work with slot-free Macs such as PowerBooks and iBooks.

The best low-cost audio adapter is Griffin Technology's $35 iMic. The 2-ounce, yo-yo-size iMic has a jack for a microphone or other audio source as well as an earphone jack.

The iMic doesn't have a microphone, however. If you want a mike for applications such as Internet telephony and speech recognition, there's MacAlly's $49 iVoice. The iVoice is only slightly larger than the iMic, and it contains a microphone as well as sound input and output jacks. But the iVoice has a flaw: When you connect an audio source to its input jack, its microphone remains active. This makes the iVoice useless for tasks such as digitizing old records in preparation for a CD burning session.

Mac-based musicians should take a close look at Tascam's $499 US-428, which combines high-quality digital audio recording and playback, a multitrack mixer and jacks for connecting to electronic instruments via the Musical Instrument Digital Interface, or MIDI. Elegantly designed in metallic blue, the US-428 includes software for both Macs and Windows.

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