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    "title": "Daniel Sokolovskiy’s Blog: posts tagged macOS",
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            "url": "https:\/\/dsokolovskiy.com\/blog\/all\/capturing-audio-on-macos\/",
            "title": "Capturing audio on macOS",
            "content_html": "<div class=\"advice-question\"><p>Hey Daniel, thanks for your great blog! Quick question: how do you capture internal audio, let’s say some streaming in the browser or a dialogue in a film? I’m running macOS Sierra.<\/p>\n<p>Anton<\/p>\n<\/div><p main>Anton, in order to capture internal audio, you need to change signal routing using a special tool. There are quite a lot of such tools out there, but among the others, I’d recommend checking out “Soundflower” — it’s a free, open-source, and tiny system extension.<\/p>\n<p aside><a href=\"https:\/\/github.com\/mattingalls\/Soundflower\">Soundflower<\/a> by Matt Ingalls on GitHub<\/p>\n<p>Once installed, go to System Preferences → Sound → Output, and choose Soundflower (2ch):<\/p>\n<div class=\"e2-text-picture\">\n<img src=\"https:\/\/dsokolovskiy.com\/blog\/pictures\/soundflower-1.jpg\" width=\"664\" height=\"496\" alt=\"\" \/>\n<div class=\"e2-text-caption\">System preferences<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>Now all you need is an audio recording software, whether it’s your DAW or an app like Audacity. Just choose <i>Soundflower (2ch)<\/i> in the audio recording settings:<\/p>\n<div class=\"e2-text-picture\">\n<img src=\"https:\/\/dsokolovskiy.com\/blog\/pictures\/soundflower-2.jpg\" width=\"738\" height=\"410\" alt=\"\" \/>\n<div class=\"e2-text-caption\">Audacity recording preferences<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>And that’s pretty much it. Once you hit the record button, it should start recording any sound that is coming from applications on your computer.<\/p>\n",
            "date_published": "2017-04-05T17:50:57+01:00",
            "date_modified": "2019-05-11T12:03:44+01:00",
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