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Thursday, November 1, 2007

Installing Audacity on the Eee PC



Fellow blogger Brad Linder has followed through with his plan to install some audio editing software as reported earlier in this blog (see Asus Eee PC for Digital Audio Editing?)

As reported in his blog, Brad Linder's Digital Home, he managed to install Audacity, an audio editor. Here is part of his report -

The Asus Eee PC has a sound recorder, but that won't get you very far if you're editing podcasts or radio stories. Ardour might be pushing it a bit, so I figured I would try to install Audacity. There's a simple add/remove programs dialog included, but right now there are only a handful of programs that you can download and most of them are actually just updated versions of the applications that ship with the Eee PC.

While working to connect the Eee PC to my home network so I could play some music off of a shared drive (it comes with Amarok), I noticed that there was an option to "Open Console Window" in the File Manager. For some reason this option is grayed out when you're in some directories. But when you're browsing attached storage devices or shared network drives, it shows up.

So I fired up the console and typed "apt-get install audacity." Nothing happened. Actually I got some error messages. I figured I'd have to add some repositories. To make a long story short, here is how to install Audacity, and presumably a bunch of other programs on an Eee PC:

  1. Open that console window by going to File Manager and clicking Tools/Open Console Window
  2. Navigate to //etc/apt
    1. You do this by first typing "cd //"
    2. Then type "cd etc"
    3. And finally "cd apt"
  3. Now it's time to edit your source list using the vi text editor
    1. Type "sudo vi sources.list"
    2. User the arrow keys to put your cursor just below "deb http://update.eeepc.asus.com/p701/en p701 main
    3. Hit the "i" key to enter insert mode
    4. Type "deb http://http.us.debian.org/debian/ stable main"
    5. Hit the "esc" key to exit insert mode
    6. Press "ZZ" in order to exit and save
  4. Now you should be back at the console
  5. Type "sudo apt-get update" to get an updated list of available packages
  6. Type "sudo apt-get install audacity" to install audacity.
  7. Select yes when it asks if you want to continue
  8. When Audacity is done installing, type "audacity" to launch the program.

And you're all set. Don't expect Audacity to be a speed demon on a 900MHz processor. And by default, sound files are larger than your screen so you'll need to do some resizing of your windows to make everything fit. This is a common problem on the Eee PC, but it's not insurmountable. Usually.

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Go and read the complete review on his site, especially if you are into digital audio. It is worth it. Definitely.

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