![]() PS : could you maybe leave a word on my other topic ? Thanks again. But it's state-of-the-art, so it basically blows everything else. I may consider it, unless HeSuVi provides the same functionality and works well. Less features, but really simple to use (select a preset, play music). Do I really need VB-Cable too to make everything work ? I've found a HeSuVi video tutorial that looks good. Lots of features, but fairly complicated. I might try their free demo.Īs for your own tool, it looks great (plus I don't get voice calls on my PC anyway), but I'm afraid I won't be able to make it work (I'm not a dev, I'm reluctant to command lines, etc.). Have you tried their demo video ? It really works for me, so it's tempting. Since it's merely a virtual sound card, it can be selected as foobar's output. The closest thing would be Out Of Your Head (OOYH) that I just mentioned. My intent was to find foobar-specific solutions, but maybe they don't exist yet. So yes, that could work, if we don't mind it being a system-wide solution (installing EAPO + HeSuVi). Thanks for your insight I already mentioned HeSuVi in my second post in this topic (and yes, I understand your concerns). ![]() They range from $20-30 each, and can be applied system wide. The instant a voice call is engaged, it will mute all output, apparently feeding NaNs into the audio pipeline.Ĭheapest feasible Windows suggestion: Buy one of the Headphone Virtualization plugins from the Microsoft Store. This piece of crap can't even function properly with voice calls from Discord. I also wrote a tool for standard C compilers which converts the 14 channel HeSuVi presets (asymmetrical responses with delayed impulses for the opposite ear) to two separate ear files for the post-14.x PulseAudio virtual surround plugin.Į: Disregard this suggestion. HeSuVi, which is basically a configurator and impulse set for Equalizer APO for Windows. There's also an unlicensed solution, if you don't mind the dubious nature of freely redistributing impulses sampled from commercial spatialization systems. On the minus side, it's really expensive : $149 for the base software + 25$ for every additional preset or something like that. Plus it seems to perform really well (I've listened to the online demos and the wow factor was there). The interesting thing about OOYH is that it's a virtual sound card, which makes it immediately compatible with foobar. Use Waves Nx with real-time head tracking – taking advantage of your computer’s camera or the Nx Head Tracker – and enjoy the enhanced realism of being in the Virtual Mix Room, anywhere and everywhere you go.There's also Isone Pro, which has a huge topic on Head-Fi :Īnd more recently / interestingly, Out Of Your Head (OOYH), which also has a huge topic on Head-Fi : Based on precision headphone measurement data provided by the Nx EQ curves are designed to balance out any extreme features in the frequency response, correcting them toward a common frequency balance and providing a more transparent starting point for monitoring and mixing. What you hear is your mix, exactly the way you want it to sound – only now you have a more accurate way to monitor it on headphones.įinally, Nx includes a Headphone EQ calibration feature, allowing you to select a correction EQ curve for specific headphone models. For optimal visual clarity, Nx Ambisonics features a spatial meter representing your tracks’ frequency content in every direction of the spherical 360° soundfield.īest of all, Nx does all this without coloring your sound or introducing any artifacts. Waves Nx is a virtual monitoring plugin that simulates the ideal acoustics of a high-end mix room inside your headphones. Nx also includes the Nx Ambisonics component, which lets you monitor Ambisonics B-format audio for 360° and VR projects on your regular stereo headphones. Want to mix for 7.1, 5.1 or 5.0 surround on your regular stereo headphones? Nx lets you do exactly that – a revolution in surround mixing. Insert the plugin on your master buss, and hear all the elements of your mix accurately laid out in space, just as you would in the sweet spot of a great-sounding professional mix room. ![]() Nx lets you mix and monitor with greater confidence, giving you a better representation of how your headphone mixes will translate to speakers. Powered by Waves’ groundbreaking Nx technology, Nx Virtual Mix Room is a virtual monitoring plugin that delivers, on headphones, the same three-dimensional depth and panoramic stereo image you would be hearing from speakers in an acoustically treated room. Need to mix on the road? This plugin recreates the acoustics of a high-end studio inside your headphones, so you can make great mixing decisions anytime, anywhere. ![]() Description Want to create great mixes but don’t have an acoustically perfect room? ![]()
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