


| Introduction Installing See’n’Sound LE Authorizing See’n’Sound LE Starting to work with See’n’Sound LE The main window pag1 - pag.2 - pag3 - pag4 - pag5 - pag6 The Ghost Window The 3D View Window The Mixer Window - pag1 - pag2 - pag3 The Global Window - pag1 - pag2 The See’n’Sound LE Menu |
The “Speed” pop-up menu lets you change the playback speed. You can choose a half or a quarter value. This option makes really easy to follow the desired subject using a touch screen monitor. Select the value “1.0 x” to restore the normal playback speed.
In the bottom center area we have three show/hide switches that let you manage the 3D, Global and Mixer windows. The “Bounce to Disk” area, the last in the Main Window, lets you to record the spatialisation on your hard disk. Note: Even if the OpenAL library is optimized for the stereo mixing and the products realized with See’n’Sound LE give the best results when listened by headphone, the QuickTime support lets you to realize mixes in a lot of different formats. In order to be able to mix in a mutli-channel format, you need to connect an optional multi-channel audio card or expander to your Macintosh. The hardware connected must be Core Audio compliant. Select the relative audio driver in the Mac OS X Audio Midi Setup utility and the number of channels available for the mix operation will raise. Note: There are several software drivers freeware that could be used to add virtual channels to See’n’Sound LE. We have tested only the famous Soundflower by Cycling 74 (the most used in Italy) and it works perfectly. You can download it directly from Cycling 74 web site. Follow the instructions provided by the Soundflower installer and you will find a lot more of precious virtual channels in your See’n’Sound LE “Bounce to Disk” options. This will let you pre-produce mixes ready to be encoded in AC3 or similar standard formats. |
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