![]() ![]() If the sound was live, that would make sense, but it was one more thing messing with the audio that was intended to be edited later. It would do stuff like de-ess sound, help with background noise, prevent peaks, and whatnot. I also used to have a dbx 286s, which I was told was awesome for podcasting at the time. You can always apply manipulation later, but if it’s recorded manipulated up-front, you can’t undo that. ![]() It made me wonder… is that good to be doing right now? Or should we be getting the audio more raw so it can be manipulated later? It kinda felt like Krisp is good for live audio but perhaps not right for recorded audio. We had a ShopTalk Show guest warn us they were using Krisp to fix up audio while on the call. When audio is live (on the radio! a concert! a zoom call!), it makes sense to do whatever you can to make sure it sounds good right away. Where is the best place to do audio manipulation? I think there is a big distinction between live audio and audio that is only recorded for later editing. I welcome a new generation of high-quality audio production and editing tools! There seems to be a whole category of tools that can do that lately, but it feels more like a feature than an app, so it’s nice to see it part of a larger whole. Also: editing the text itself to edit the audio (like if you remove a word in the transcript, it plucks it out of the audio). The editor looks very innovative, allowing you to drag in audio clips to splice in, in between people talking or in the background. Also: fancy cleaning up of audio (as seen above, and automatic removals of uhmmms and ahhhhs) which means they get to call it “AI-Powered” and get their AI merit badge. Sounds like you invite people and record together ala Riverside or Zencastr, but it’s doing more, like transcribing the audio (including who is talking when which is wild) as soon as it uploads. It looks like the complete tool will integrate these things, but be much more, like an actual recording studio. The right source, the right gain, no weird sounds coming through, etc. I would get a warning when any of the checks are bad.ĭave has mentioned this to me several times over the years on ShopTalk: there should be a quick way to check if you’re audio is correct. This might be creepy, but I think I’d like to see a product like this running all the time, say as a menu bar app. It’s best to get the best quality you can up-front rather than have to manipulate it later. ![]()
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