iMic
iMic was the first USB audio adapter that worked. It worked like a Mac too. I mean you plugged it in and it worked. You go to your system Preferences/Sound/Output, and you see built-in audio. Plug in the iMic to your keyboard or any free USB port, and watch as it appears like Mac-jic in your list of choices.
I love mine because I have an older tower with no connections in front and in my advancing years the notion of getting on my knees to drag my tower out of its cubby and well why go there when I can reach for this dangle called an iMic and then plug in my headphones and Rock-on.
Okay so I am reviewing a product you can no longer buy. That is because the new and improved iMic is here. My ole puppy supported headphones and microphones but the new one takes in line levels too.
Quote:
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iMic shines as the essential tool for converting your old LPs and tapes into MP3s and CDs. Griffin's audio recording software Final Vinyl for Mac OS X (provided for free exclusively to iMic owners) makes recording old records and tapes super easy, with several advanced features such as waveform-based cue editing and built-in 10-band EQ. Final Vinyl can also equalize LPs without having to connect a turntable to a pre-amp.
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Okay, I sold all but two crates of my albums and most of you never had any. Eight tracks are even rarer but maybe you have some cassettes laying around. I bought it just to plug in my headphones and I am most pleased. The iMic just became an even better value. If you have a need for an easy way to get sound in or out of any computer with USB, the iMic gives you the most bang for the buck.
Nuff Said!
