Heh you dont need someone to do it for you.

All you need to do is connect the line out from your tape recorder to your line input on your computer sound card then use Goldwave to record the output.
At the risk of sounding brash, he's trying to transfer 8 tracks, not a stereo pair. For that he'd need an 8-channel sound card to do the job right. You also need software that can record 8 channels simultaneously, which last I checked, Goldwave didn't. Reaper does, though, but in any case, he didn't say he actually had the
machine - he may well just have the tapes.
Bearing in mind if you save these recordings as wave files they might be huge depending on the recording time.
This is especially true for multitracks. I've actually been doing this kind of transfer myself, and each tape has come out around 4.7 gigabytes.
Also if you want high quality recordings, i recomend 2 recording formats.
MP3 - 320Khz 16bit Dual Channel Stereo
OGG Vorbis
Not a good idea, to be honest. When I did mine, I used 8 channels of 24/96 in raw WAV format. While Ogg is capable of supporting up to 256 channels, I have had numerous problems with its compression scheme, and also with MP3 as well.
Particularly if you're using joint stereo, you can have serious imaging problems - feeding MP3s or OGG files though a stereo imaging processor can make it completely disintegrate into horrible compression artifacts.
Ogg and MP3 are okay as listening formats, but
definitely not archival quality.
Unless the tapes have gone sticky, I could probably do the transfer, but since he's probably not in the UK I'd be a little reluctant on account of the shipping logistics
