I'm at the point of head copying now, so I don't need the aid of the scrolling letters. I thought I was never gonna get to the level of instant recognition, but you'll also get there eventually. Just continue doing deliberate practice. I try to be mindful, feel, and imagine each letter as they play. It becomes automatic, and individual characters start to form into units. When this happens, I feel and imagine the words and start understanding the story's context without thinking about it. There's a point where, before, it was manual, and then it becomes automatic. I do my deliberate listening practice before bed, so the first 15 minutes is me being manual, being mindful, and feeling and imagining the individual letters. Then I just let go for the rest of the story, relax, and listen. Like a bedtime story, it lulls me to sleep. I loop and put my Morse code stories on a playlist, and they play in the background. I like the sound of Morse code. It is very soothing.
The sync of the audio and the highlighted character is awesome. How do you do these syncing? If it’s via a software with AI is it able to recognize audio from the radio? 73
First of all, I love your channel and am subbed. 😊 I used the Morse-it app to encode the story into morse code and it created the synced rolling letters. The morse code is the only thing not assisted by AI. Morse-it also has a decode function where it can decode clean morse audio. However, it does not do very well decoding with the extra radio noise in the background. Hope this helps! Cheers and 73 and keep up your amazing content!
Hi Mauro. This is a great way to learn morse code because the letters are highlighted as the sound plays. It helps with instantly recognizing the sound pattern of the letter. It combines an audible and visual approach to learning. This unconventional method enabled me to learn morse code. It won't be easy. It will take months and months of deliberate practice to associate the letter with the sound pattern. Just keep at it and practice, practice, and practice. For the more advanced, they can listen to the morse code in the background and decode it to practice copying. The other video I have for morse code practice is here: th-cam.com/video/x2i2Z8DT1pA/w-d-xo.html
Thanks for letting me know about the volume. I just checked the volume level on 3 different devices and the sound level was acceptable. I'm planning on adding more Morse Code Bedtime Story videos so I'll try increasing the volume on the upcoming videos just to be sure its also good on other devices. Thanks!
Been spending years on Morse code … and finally you made it all worthwhile!
What a nice, short, crisp really Morse thriller!
Thanks, send us more!
Brilliant!
Awesome. Can you please create more content like that? Maybe at 20/20 22/22 and 25/25?
This is gr8 but i zone out abit - thanks for putting this together, I'm sure it will come with practice. :)
I'm at the point of head copying now, so I don't need the aid of the scrolling letters. I thought I was never gonna get to the level of instant recognition, but you'll also get there eventually. Just continue doing deliberate practice. I try to be mindful, feel, and imagine each letter as they play. It becomes automatic, and individual characters start to form into units. When this happens, I feel and imagine the words and start understanding the story's context without thinking about it. There's a point where, before, it was manual, and then it becomes automatic.
I do my deliberate listening practice before bed, so the first 15 minutes is me being manual, being mindful, and feeling and imagining the individual letters. Then I just let go for the rest of the story, relax, and listen. Like a bedtime story, it lulls me to sleep.
I loop and put my Morse code stories on a playlist, and they play in the background. I like the sound of Morse code. It is very soothing.
Very good
The sync of the audio and the highlighted character is awesome. How do you do these syncing? If it’s via a software with AI is it able to recognize audio from the radio?
73
First of all, I love your channel and am subbed. 😊 I used the Morse-it app to encode the story into morse code and it created the synced rolling letters. The morse code is the only thing not assisted by AI. Morse-it also has a decode function where it can decode clean morse audio. However, it does not do very well decoding with the extra radio noise in the background. Hope this helps! Cheers and 73 and keep up your amazing content!
@@themarconian thanks for the kind word and the info 😀 73!
hahaha I love it. Both of them.!
Nice.
Hi Mauro. This is a great way to learn morse code because the letters are highlighted as the sound plays. It helps with instantly recognizing the sound pattern of the letter. It combines an audible and visual approach to learning. This unconventional method enabled me to learn morse code. It won't be easy. It will take months and months of deliberate practice to associate the letter with the sound pattern. Just keep at it and practice, practice, and practice.
For the more advanced, they can listen to the morse code in the background and decode it to practice copying.
The other video I have for morse code practice is here:
th-cam.com/video/x2i2Z8DT1pA/w-d-xo.html
How did you make the scrolling text?
The Morse-it app has an encode feature that converts text to Morse code and it presents it as scrolling letters. Hope this answers your question. 😊
Brilliant, but too quiet. Even at max volume could barely hear.
Thanks for letting me know about the volume. I just checked the volume level on 3 different devices and the sound level was acceptable. I'm planning on adding more Morse Code Bedtime Story videos so I'll try increasing the volume on the upcoming videos just to be sure its also good on other devices. Thanks!
@@themarconian I checked again today with other audio sources and I think the problem was on my end.
Good to know. Thanks for taking the time to check. I appreciate it very much!
A narrated version of the story with all the artwork is here:
th-cam.com/video/rdvnyOiu2o0/w-d-xo.html