

My sincerest condolences to Wendy and family. I've heard that no one is irreplaceable, but that's how I know whoever said that, never knew Enzo. I won't have a lot of regrets when my time is up, but now in the top 3 will be that I didn't make that drive up to Lansing sooner. Reflect on the hours Shiawassee was open to help us, and the hours Enzo would be on here posting, and how so much of what he did for us came out of the goodness of his giant heart.

Be honest with yourself, how much music could you make, without your equipment? "The Mighty Enzo" helped so many of us, in his shop, and here on the Forum, and on other Forums, maintain and repair our equipment. While Enzo carried an engineering/technical segment of the music industry, it truly is like the industry losing an EVH. It is difficult to identify, the last time I was overcome with such sadness. But a right to repair is of little use without the ability to repair, and Enzo was a giant in making people acquire and improve that ability and in sharing his expertise.

Politics are just now wrapping their head around "right to repair" legislation to reduce the amount of stuff going the way of the landfill. It boggles the mind to hear (and read in the archives) just how long he has been helping people here and elsewhere find their way around old gear and keep or restore it to working. Enzo has been patient and helpful during this time and more often than not first up to bat when people wanted help. I don't think I joined the Peavey forum for much more than half a year. I do not have the words to express what his friendship has meant to me for 25+ years. To quote his wife Wendy "his giant heart finally gave out". Our great friend and teacher Douglas "Enzo" McCallum passed away last night. Peavy probably makes one, and Behringer makes an inexpensive one.This one is hard, and for me especially hard. You can also get Guitar-USB interfaces, so you can record the guitar directly on the computer (with Audacity or other recording software), if you'd rather do that than use the iPhone. If you don't want to edit, you may not need Audacity. Then, you can use Audacity for editing, if you wish. Then you should be able to transfer the audio file to your computer digitally via USB. I assume you can record to your iPhone with the peavy gizmo. There are a couple of other options, depending on what you are trying to do. You obviously don't need Audacity to play a sound on your computer, or to hear the sound coming into the computer's mic input (out of the laptop speakers, or the laptop's headphone-out). but no signal from the guitar comes out of Audacity?You're getting sound from where? From the computer, or from the iPhone? Are these "recordings' on yoru iPhone, or on your computer? I can connect everything and get sound from recordings I've done. A headphone-out to line-in on a desktop computer is a better match. The headphone-out from your iPhone to the mic-in on your laptop should "work", but the mic input is usually too sensitive for a headphone-level signal and you might get distortion.
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You just need to configure the Windows audio control panel properly.
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And, you don't need any special software to hear the sound coming into the computer's mic input (out of the laptop speakers, or the laptop's headphone-out).

You obviously don't need Audacity to play a sound on your computer. What are you really trying to do? Do you want to record on your iPhone, or the computer? but no signal from the guitar comes out of Audacity?You're getting sound from where? From the computer, or from the iPhone? Are these "recordings" on your iPhone, or on your computer?
