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Unfortunately, when hard drives crash, data stored on them is often lost due to corruption to the magnetic surface of the discs themselves, or to actual physical damage. If no .wav files are able to be seen, they may have simply been lost.
If those files still exist and are able to be retrieved from the disc surface, they will be in the same location within the directory structure that you originally saved them to.
Go to bossbr.net - Plenty of answers there! And yes, you have to master or export the tracks to .mp3 or .wav. These files will be located in the mp3 folder. Boss also makes a free .wav converter located on their website.
There is a free program called Media Monkey - it will convert WAV format to Mp3 (actually, it will convert any non-protected music file type - it's very dynamic). It may take a while to figure out how to do the first one, but it will get easier after that.
First, you have to plug the Thomson in to your computer, double-click "My Computer," and then double-click the icon of the Thomson. There should be a folder called "Voice or "REC". If it doesn't show up, select in the window: Tools --> Folder Options --> View --> select Show Hidden Files and folders. Now the right folder should show up. Then, drag the WAV recording to your desktop (or your "My Music" fodler - whichever works best for you), and the computer should make a copy of the WAV recording onto your computer.
Now open up Media Monkey and it should, after several minutes find all music files on your computer, including the WAV recording. Then right-click the WAV recording, and it should have an option to covnert the file type - convert to mp3, and you're done.
When using the DSS Player v7 software the program is unable to convert WMA to WAV. The option you see there only works when it is a .dss file that needs to be converted to .wav. In order to convert WMA to WAV you will need to locate a third party software program that does this type of conversion.
Go to google and search on WMA to WAV conversion editors.
I told you, the first software was wrong was for mp3 , use wavelab or sound forge. They can manage Wav files in saving. All you have to do is open file and save as or export. You do not need to use any other options.
maybe, you got those wav. files copy controlled. check out the relevant preferences from the voice recorder menus. if this solution doesn't work, simply convert the files into mp3, then convert them into wav. again. I hope this could help..
This was a fun project. Here's how I did it. You'll need to download a freeware audio editor named Audacity. I did this on a Mac, but it's cross-platform, and I'm assuming the menus are the same for Windows.
http://audacity.sourceforge.net/
Then.
(1) Copy .pwi (Note) file to PC
(2) Open Audacity
(3) Get the Note audio into Audacity by:
Project menu
Import as raw data
(4) Select all of the audio by clicking below its file name at left of the graphic of the file
(5) Click on dropdown menu (arrow next to file name)
Set Rate to 11025 Hz
(6) Convert to WAV by:
File menu
Export as wav
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