Sound Recorder can record audio from a
microphone or
headset. In addition, many modern sound cards allow their output channels to be recorded through a
loopback channel, typically called "Wave-Out Mix" or "
Stereo Mix". Before Windows Vista, Sound Recorder was capable of: • Playing the audio files that it has recorded • Converting the
bit rate,
bit depth and
sampling rate of the audio file • Inserting other audio files at the beginning, end or the desired location of the current audio • Splitting out parts of the current audio clip • Increasing or decreasing volume in 25% increments • Increase or decrease playback speed in 100% increments • Adding an
echo (without
reverberation) • Reversing the current audio clip These features, however, were either removed in Windows Vista or taken over by other applications. The playback and trimming features reappeared in Voice Recorder, although Voice Recorder can only play its own recordings. Sound Recorder accepts
command-line parameters. This was removed in Windows 8, as Windows Store apps cannot be run with a parameter from the command-line.
File format Before Windows 7, Sound Recorder could save the recorded audio in
waveform audio (.wav)
container files. Sound Recorder could also open and play existing .wav files. To successfully open compressed .wav files in Sound Recorder, the audio codec used by the file must be installed in the
Audio Compression Manager (ACM); Windows installations dating back to at least Windows 95 came with a selection of standard codecs that included
Truespeech,
GSM 6.10,
G.723.1, IMA ADPCM and CCITT
A-law and
u-law, with additional codecs being added in later editions. Starting with Windows Vista, Sound Recorder saves recorded audio in
Windows Media Audio (.wma) files instead; the exceptions to this are the
Home Basic N and Business N editions, which continue to use .wav. Also,
audio metadata such as
Artist,
Album,
Title, and
Genre can be added to the sound file directly while saving the file. Voice Recorder in Windows 10 only records audio in
MPEG-4 Part 14 (.m4a) container formats. ==Issues==