Tom Koveleskie
Forum Replies Created
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Thanks! I’ll give it a try.
I graduated from “Hardnock University”.
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I’ve coded the single site page with Dreamweaver HTML Sorry I can’t make the link public. We can’t let the site become public because it is just for screening purposes for some individual programming buyers and brokers. I can send it privately although.
I graduated from “Hardnock University”.
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Thanks.. I already did this before posting… I am just too new to coding and get hung up on certain steps… I need to find someone to do this for me.
I graduated from “Hardnock University”.
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Thank you for this… I gave this a whirl but couldn’t get it to work… I am a total newbie to coding a site… I think I am not giving the code the right URl for the video to be seen… I’ve tried all sorts of combination without success… I guess it’s craigs list time to see if I can get someone to help me. Thanks again…
I graduated from “Hardnock University”.
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Tom Koveleskie
June 12, 2010 at 3:00 pm in reply to: Need a recommendation on a remote Voice Over setupMike, a problem that came to mind with your planned setup is computer background noise… You said you need the vo’s to be broadcast quality. In a quiet room you may pick up what ever is running in the background. This happened to me. The past six months I have been doing a lot of voice overs and additional dialogue replacement for a program. With the first vo I had my computer running and recodred the vo’s directly into my NLE program through the sound card. The result was that I could hear the computer in the sound file… and my computer is fairly quiet. I now do the recording with my camera, which is inaudible, and turn off all the equipment in my editing bay. Now I get super clean vo’s. Also air conditioners and other household ambient noises are another thing to watch out for… The person doing the vo must be aware of any noise in the background that could be potentially picked up. The booth will help quite a bit, but depending on the mic used it can and will pick up some extraneous background. You would need to keep the computer as far away from the booth as possible.
I also prefer to monitor the vo person. I can catch mistakes and also direct them to speak in a certain way to fit the tone of the script.
I graduated from “Hardnock University”.
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Tom Koveleskie
June 11, 2010 at 3:04 pm in reply to: Need a recommendation on a remote Voice Over setupYes this is possible and easy… You can give him a portable voice over booth that works fantastic. I use one all the time. You can buy a pre-made booth or make it yourself as I did.
Use 2.5″ acoustic tile cut to fit in a 14″x14″ Whitmor collapsible storage cube sold by Target and Amazon.com, line the top, back and sides. The bottom doesn’t need covering. I have added a few pics for you to see. Hopefully I posted them correctly…
Put a decent mic on a stand with a pop filter in front of the mic… (I am showing my mic without the pop filter installed) and you are good to go. You’ll just have to decide what audio recording device you have for him to use..

I graduated from “Hardnock University”. -
The JVC cams are power hogs. I have a HD110 and use the “Swit” dual battery adapter. It allows you to use 2 batteries at once. This is an alternative to the very expensive other adapters like IDX. I have been using cheapo batteries with the setup. The company that sells the adapters is in New Zealand and they are good to deal with.
I graduated from “Hardnock University”.

