Check to see if your sound card on your Dell has an "audio input" jack - most still do.
Most Dells have 3, 1/8" jacks in the back:
One for mic in
One for audio out (GREEN)
One for audio in
Some soundcards have as many as 5-6 jacks for surround sound ... Here is a color code from Dell, I think it's industry standard:
------------------------------------------------------------
YELLOW: Center & Sub (LFE) channel outputs (Note: LFE stands for Low Frequency Effects)
PINK: Microphone input
BLUE: Line input
GREEN: Front Left & Right channel outputs
BLACK: Rear Left & Right channel outputs
---------------------------------------------------------
The blue one is the one you want - If you want to go cheap I would go to Radio shack and purchase a good quality 1/8" stereo to RCA adapter or spring for the "Monster ipod cable" at Best Buy and if you want to go NUTS call Cobalt Cable or Frank at Signal cable and have them make you one. Your next battle will be software ... I use NERO or D.A.R.T. but you probably have something that came with the Dell. You need something that will do RECORDING. Windows has a recorder built in but it pretty much bites. Nero suite is pretty cheap and comes with a good recording interface for simple stuff like analog tape to digital conversion. Hit play on the tape deck to feed the signal in - Select the recording properties of your sound card and bring up the input volume to about 3/4 and fire up Nero recorder. The instructions on-line for Nero will show you how to get the software to link to the input signal coming from the cassette... it's pretty easy and you will get a bar meter showing an input signal - adjust the input volume and hit record. Do a few test runs to see what it sounds like but I think you will be happy.
Here is the link to the Nero users manual:
ftp://ftp6.nero.com/manuals/nero_soundtrax/NeroSoundTrax_eng.pdf
http://ww2.nero.com/enu/User_Guides_SoundTrax.html
Good luck ..
Most Dells have 3, 1/8" jacks in the back:
One for mic in
One for audio out (GREEN)
One for audio in
Some soundcards have as many as 5-6 jacks for surround sound ... Here is a color code from Dell, I think it's industry standard:
------------------------------------------------------------
YELLOW: Center & Sub (LFE) channel outputs (Note: LFE stands for Low Frequency Effects)
PINK: Microphone input
BLUE: Line input
GREEN: Front Left & Right channel outputs
BLACK: Rear Left & Right channel outputs
---------------------------------------------------------
The blue one is the one you want - If you want to go cheap I would go to Radio shack and purchase a good quality 1/8" stereo to RCA adapter or spring for the "Monster ipod cable" at Best Buy and if you want to go NUTS call Cobalt Cable or Frank at Signal cable and have them make you one. Your next battle will be software ... I use NERO or D.A.R.T. but you probably have something that came with the Dell. You need something that will do RECORDING. Windows has a recorder built in but it pretty much bites. Nero suite is pretty cheap and comes with a good recording interface for simple stuff like analog tape to digital conversion. Hit play on the tape deck to feed the signal in - Select the recording properties of your sound card and bring up the input volume to about 3/4 and fire up Nero recorder. The instructions on-line for Nero will show you how to get the software to link to the input signal coming from the cassette... it's pretty easy and you will get a bar meter showing an input signal - adjust the input volume and hit record. Do a few test runs to see what it sounds like but I think you will be happy.
Here is the link to the Nero users manual:
ftp://ftp6.nero.com/manuals/nero_soundtrax/NeroSoundTrax_eng.pdf
http://ww2.nero.com/enu/User_Guides_SoundTrax.html
Good luck ..