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Ask Slashdot: Recording Business Meeting Audio On an Intranet?

dousette writes "I have been tasked with modernizing our company's board room. Replacing the overhead projector with a more modern LCD projector is a no-brainer, speakers are easy enough to wire off of the HDMI projector, but one of the requirements that has me stumped is the recording of minutes. The existing system uses wired microphones connected to a cassette player, and what I would love to replace this with are some sort of Ethernet microphone that could stream directly to a Windows file share. Does such an animal exist? Do you have any other suggestions for the room that I might be missing?" So if you wanted to bypass a stand-alone system, how would you go about dumping audio straight to your network?

12 of 85 comments (clear)

  1. Mini-PC and pulseaudio by maweki · · Score: 3, Interesting

    As far as I know, you could put a linux-box there with pulseaudio and make the input device network-available. You could record then with any pulseaudio-system anywhere.

    1. Re:Mini-PC and pulseaudio by CanHasDIY · · Score: 4, Interesting

      As far as I know, you could put a linux-box there with pulseaudio and make the input device network-available. You could record then with any pulseaudio-system anywhere.

      This, this, this.

      Raspberry Pi, anyone?

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    2. Re:Mini-PC and pulseaudio by MightyYar · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Careful, you might not want the boardroom audio available to all.

      The safest path might be to replace the tape deck with a solid state recorder with removable storage. I've hooked ours up to an iPod in the past.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    3. Re:Mini-PC and pulseaudio by jeffmeden · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Careful, you might not want the boardroom audio available to all.

      The safest path might be to replace the tape deck with a solid state recorder with removable storage. I've hooked ours up to an iPod in the past.

      This. I would suggest keeping the Mics (they probably have good placement and superior audio) and feeding them into a small digital recorder that someone has the responsibility of starting/stopping/uploading. This way only the activity that is supposed to be recorded, retransmitted, etc. is actually done since a human needs to handle the movement of the information. Try to automate it and get it wrong (even on accident,) and you could find yourself looking for a new job at best, and looking out from a jail cell at worst.

      My first thought was some sort of remote-controlled mic system that took cues from an Exchange server managing meeting resource events. That way the file would automatically be generated for each meeting that was scheduled, and saved accordingly. That would be awesome until someone scheduled an off the record meeting and found out only later that the whole thing was recorded and stashed on the intranet where who knows who has access to it.

    4. Re:Mini-PC and pulseaudio by CanHasDIY · · Score: 3, Informative

      Would have suggested that right away but didn't know whether it packs enough bang.

      Me either, but I did find a discussion thread where some fellas managed to get pulseaudio running w/ VLC Of course, that's only playback...

      Since we're just talking about simple voice recording, surely the hardware requirements would be minimal? I mean, if 12k is good enough for phone conversations...

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
  2. Who takes the minutes? by White+Flame · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Do you just dump the audio archives somewhere for hypothetical later retrieval (which isn't really "minutes"), or is somebody tasked with creating the actual minutes from the recordings after the meeting? Having a person writing up the minutes as the meeting progresses is generally a better idea in my experience. Then it's just normal document editing.

    1. Re:Who takes the minutes? by hesiod · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The auto-transcribed document wouldn't be able to identify who is speaking at any given time.

  3. I install that solution all the time. by Lumpy · · Score: 4, Informative

    http://www.amazon.com/Marantz-PMD580-Rack-Mount-CompactFlash-Recorder/dp/B0017OM6JQ

    we install them all the time.

    And yes it's the only real solution, if they balk at the price, they really dont want to do what you are asking, hook up a Laptop and press record if they are too cheap to buy the real tool for the job.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  4. Write & scan (plus the oblig Raspberry Pi comm by PSVMOrnot · · Score: 3, Informative

    To get the obligatory Raspberry Pi out of the way: Hook up a microphone to a Raspberry Pi, and have that record/dump onto your local network fileshare.

    On a more serious note though, it should be the job of someone in the meeting to take the minutes. It'll all well and good to have an automated system recording audio of the thing for future reference, but it is much better to have someone taking down the key points manually. Not only do you have a backup incase of failure of your system, but you also have a summary with the most important points which is much easier to skim over and extract information from.

    If you combine handwritten notes with a document scanner in the room you can have a system to scan, archive and distribute a copy of the minutes almost instantly. Alternatively the minutes could be typed onto a netbook/small laptop and that document emailed round.

  5. if you want it on a torrent, yeah, go for it by swschrad · · Score: 3, Insightful

    because if it's on a machine accessable to The Connected Internet, and anybody who wants to punk or bleed you wants it, they'll find a way to it.

    there's still such a thing as a microcassette recorder, and such a thing as a digital recorder, that you can start, set next to the conferencing phone, and have a clerk type up. not all technology needs to migrate to the cloud by 5 pm today.

    --
    if this is supposed to be a new economy, how come they still want my old fashioned money?
  6. BOFH by HornWumpus · · Score: 3, Funny

    Cat5 and newer has an 'extra' twisted pair in each cable.

    Just disconnect the extra pair from behind the wall panal and solder a condenser mic across the leads. Do it to all the conference rooms and offices in the executive suite. When you need to hear what they are plotting and planning you go into the wiring closet and listen.

    None of the suits will notice their network is only 10Mbps.

    Credit where it's due. The BOFH did this many years ago, back when his column was funny.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  7. More information by dousette · · Score: 3

    Thanks for all the helpful comments (even you, "let me google that for you" guy)!

    We have a requirement that all board meetings have to be recorded for two reasons -- one, so the minutes can be derived from the recording, and two, open records requests by the public to hear the meeting audio. Recordings have to be kept for a certain period, and I was hoping to automate the boxes and boxes of old tapes we have sitting around (by keeping X previous recordings and dropping the oldest ones automatically when their expiration date comes).

    Before "let me google that for you" guy Googled it for me I read an article on doing this with Pulseaudio, but I am more in the market for a commercial solution for capturing and streaming the audio. It has to work every time without technical assistance, and while there are some areas where I am comfortable rolling my own solution, this is not one of them. Now, for the receiving piece running on a server in the datacenter I am open to a more customized solution.

    I found a product from Barix called the Exstreamer 500 for about $600 at Pro Audio Gear. Does anyone have any experience with Barix devices? It appears that it can either stream the audio over a built-in Shoutcast server or record directly to a USB key. If streaming over a private VLAN to a non-internet-connected server is deemed too risky by mgmt, then at the very least the recordings could be uploaded from the USB key (maybe along with the manual transcription and/or minutes) after the meeting.

    Thanks again for all your suggestions! I knew someone out there had to have done this before me.