![]() Recorder.js is smart in that uses a Web Worker to put together the. Its only 12.7KB (non minified) and 3.2KB when gzipped, you’re spending only 1 HTTP call, and you can load it directly from the Rawgit CDN for production. Nevertheless, if you’re looking to record mono or 2 channel uncompressed pcm audio Recorder.js is still a great choice. That’s also in part because newer libraries, like Web Audio Recorder, vmsg and opus-recorder, although a lot bigger, can also convert the audio to mp3, Opus or Vorbis. This repository is not being actively maintained due to lack of time and interest. In July 2016 Matt updated the repository to say that: When used in conjunction with getUserMedia() Recorder.js can record audio from a user’s microphone (or other input devices) directly in your web site.ĭespite its popularity – the project has 2700+ stars on GitHub – the library is not maintained anymore. It is the 1st JS library to deal with audio recording in the browser – the initial commit is from September 2012, almost 6 years ago. Matt Diamond‘s Recorder.js is a popular JavaScript library for recording audio in the browser as uncompressed pcm audio in. Next, we’ll cover using WebAudioRecorder, vmsg, the opus-recorder and MediaRecording API. This is the 1st post in our new recording audio in HTML5 series. ![]()
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