Denpa Digital Voice Recorders
Written by Jeremy Horelick
Denpa digital voice recorders are popping up in more than just doctors' offices, lecture halls, and other places where dictation is common. More and more everyday consumers are phasing out cumbersome legal pads and Post-It notes in favor of cleaner, more efficient handheld voice recorders. When you look at the features that now come standard with most digital recorders it's easy to see why this is.
For one thing, digital voice recorders quash the need for pens and pencils, which more often than not end up slipping into the cracks of your car seats and couches or the depths of your laptop carrying cases or luggage. Handhelds also eliminate a closely related cousin of "elusive fountain pen" syndrome: "leaky fountain pen" syndrome. There are, as of now, no known cases of ink-spewing digital recorders.
About Denpa Digital Voice Recorders
There are several value-added advantages of Denpa digital voice recorders such as long-play capabilities of up to 72 hours. Denpa digital voice recorders boast outstanding compression so that more voice information may be stored on their memory cards. Unlike picture files, voice files can withstand considerable degradation and still produce easily intelligible results (provided you're not prepping this voice data for broadcast).
It's not just file sizes that are compact when it comes to these digital recorders. The machines themselves are only four inches tall and therefore easy to hold or store in a pocket or carrying case. Better still, with lockable keys and controls, you'll never have to worry about accidentally erasing or recording over stored data, a common phenomenon with handheld recorders from eras past.
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