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Virtual Audio Cable is a software product based on WDM multimedia driver that allows a user to transfer audio streams from one application to another. Any application is able to send an audio stream to the input side of a "virtual cable" while a corresponding application can receive this stream from the output side.
In the early 1960s, the Rangers played Saturday afternoon games, which were tape delayed [1] for evening re-broadcast on Channel 11. The Saturday night [ 2 ] hockey games were almost always shown at 9 p.m. Road games were usually aired live if the Rangers were at Chicago , where the game was at 8:30 p.m., and after expansion , in St. Louis or ...
Cross-platform Audio Creation Tool (XACT) is an audio programming library and engine released by Microsoft as part of the DirectX SDK. [1] It is a high-level audio library for authoring/playing audio that is written to use Xaudio on the Xbox, DirectSound on Windows XP, and the new audio stack on Windows Vista and Windows 7. Xaudio is an Xbox ...
However, it only allows the use of the default voice, Microsoft Sam, even if other voices have been installed. In Windows Vista and Windows 7, Narrator has been updated to use SAPI 5.3 and the Microsoft Anna voice for English. In Windows Ultimate and Windows editions for China, the Microsoft Lili voice for Mandarin Chinese is included.
Oh Sang-mi, better known as Sam Oh is a South Korean television host, radio broadcaster. A Korean expatriate who has been living in the Philippines for 20 years. [ 1 ] She can speak Tagalog and English in addition to her native Korean .
A mult box is a device that allows a single audio source, such as a microphone, to be shared to multiple outputs for recording or broadcast. [1] A mult box is sometimes called a press box, but that term is usually reserved for the sports media's section of an arena. It may also be called a press mult box or press bridge. [2]
Windows Media is a discontinued multimedia framework for media creation and distribution for Microsoft Windows.It consists of a software development kit (SDK) with several application programming interfaces (API) and a number of prebuilt technologies, and is the replacement of NetShow technologies.
Lip-ribbon microphones use baffles to create an acoustic labyrinth within the body of the microphone. [1] The microphone's bi-directional polar pattern controls interference; sound from the commentator reaches one side of the ribbon more than the other, whereas sounds from other sources contact both sides of the ribbon (at a difference in phase of 180°) and cancel out. [1]