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I'm looking for advice on a microphone to purchase for Skype conference calls, using a Mac mini. We've been using a usb mic, but we get a lot of noise during the conference calls (robotic sounds).

I've found a couple:

Omni-directional Conference Microphone: http://www.altoedge.com/microphones/conference-phone-vec.html

Philips Speech Boundary Conference Microphone: http://www.amazon.com/Philips-Conference-Microphone-CONFERENCE-MICROPHONE/dp/B00655CSDG

Please advise on a quality microphone that does NOT connect via USB and works well with Skype conference calls.

Thank you

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  • Why don't you want a USB mic? Commented Sep 21, 2012 at 21:00
  • It seems that there is a problem with the Mac OS usb mic driver (discussions.apple.com/thread/2166616?start=0&tstart=0)
    – Timothy Steffens
    Commented Sep 24, 2012 at 14:08
  • I don't experience that problem, and I regularly have 1-hour conference calls over Skype with my Blue Snowball. Further, there are a lot of people doing music production with USB based audio interfaces on their Macs. Commented Sep 24, 2012 at 14:22
  • It could be an issue with devices that have low quality USB implementations. Commented Sep 24, 2012 at 14:24
  • This seems like the wrong site for this. Try Superuser or Ask Different.
    – burnso
    Commented Dec 22, 2012 at 14:59

2 Answers 2

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I realize that you think you don't want a USB mic, but I'm going to recommend one anyway: The Blue Snowball. I use one frequently for my Skype calls, and it does a much better job of rejecting the fan noise of my MacBook Pro than the built-in mic.

Keep in mind that the audio ports on a PC are descendants of the original SoundBlaster card. One of the features that has persisted over the decades is low-voltage plug-in power. Rather than a mono signal or the balanced mono signal that you'd expect from pro-audio gear, the PC microphone port appears to be mono with an extra low-voltage power line. You can easily identify microphones intended for plug-in power by their 3.5mm TRS ("stereo") jacks. If you plug one of these microphones into your mac, you will get nothing. This is because the audio-in jack on your mac expects a line-level signal, which is what you would get from a CD player. Without plug-in power, the signal will be too weak for your mac to detect. The problem is that just about all the inexpensive microphones out there are intended for PCs and their plug-in power ports.

So you have two options. You could get a microphone pre-amp (expensive) or a small mixer with microphone pre-amps (possibly less expensive, but also lower quality than a standalone microphone pre) and a pro-audio mic (also expensive). Or you could get a high quality "podcasting" mic with a built-in pre-amp and USB interface.

The first conference mic that you linked to has a 3.5mm stereo plug and needs a "sound card with a mic-in socket." That sounds to me like the mic needs an audio interface with plug-in power. Even if it doesn't, it generates a mic-level signal (much lower voltage than line-level), so your mac won't hear anything

The Philips mic doesn't provide enough information to judge whether it will work in your situation.

Even if the two conference mics were likely to work with your mac, they probably wouldn't solve your problem. An omnidirectional mic will pick up sound from every direction. You complain about your mic picking up "robotic sounds." That could either be a consequence of a really bad audio interface or background noise from your computer or something else near your conference area. A more directional mic will allow you to adjust what is picked up by your mic by turning it.

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With a single person on the line we use a usb headset. The audio quality is quite acceptable for voice over IP such as skype. Not every single usb headset works on a MAC, so be sure it is mac compatible. We like Logitech but any name brand will likely give you a good result. The headset will keep the mic close to your mouth (presence) and keep extraneous background (ambient) noises to a minimum. The separation of the earphones and mic keeps feedback to an absolute minimum.

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  • The OP states clearly: Please advise on a quality microphone that does NOT connect via USB and works well with Skype conference calls. You state: With a single person on the line we use a usb headset. Therefore not a good answer. Commented Jan 22, 2013 at 0:56

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