

The initial hype wave of the Mac Studio washed over us all, with impressive promises of performance. Does the Mac Studio make sense for home producers? Meanwhile, the built-in webcam is also subpar in the quality department, but at least Apple has promised to fix this with a software update. On top of that, the selection of stands is factory configured and cannot be altered after the fact – which sucks, frankly.

The six-speaker system did not give you a particularly accurate image of Apple’s Spatial Audio format. Apart from the astronomical price tag, there were several aspects that simply didn’t cut it. There are 4 frequency bands available to choose between, depending on where the harshness and sibilance are coming from.The new Studio Display received mostly mixed reviews, while some were unconvinced, to say the least. Turning the processing knob starts the plug-in’s operation, you then set how intense you want to go according to your taste. It is fast to set up and easy to use, yet allows you to adjust the processing to your needs. T-De-Esser has been designed with simplicity in mind. Less is more, so just to avoid getting caught in the trap of making infinite, minuscule tweaks, we made sure only to have the essential options available for you on the GUI. Whilst there are only a few knobs and buttons on the GUI, each has a huge impact on the audio sound improvement. T-De-Esser, however, helps you just stay focused on the output sound, rather than how things change visually as you tweak the settings. Visuals can distract your hearing, digital graphs are very likely to affect your decision-making when it comes to setting the values. The only noticeable difference will be the Unlike the majority of De-Esser plug-ins available on the market, T-De-Esser gives a pure natural sound while smoothing the high-frequencies. Mac OS X 10.11 (OS X El Capitan) and up as 64bit VST, VST3, and AU, and 64-bit AAX, Intel, and Native M1


Windows 7 and up as 32 / 64-bit VST and VST3, and 64-bit AAX (PT11 and up).
