Wow. I looked at the website and this thing sounds ausome. I am def saving up 
the $99 to get it but I grabbed the trial.

Thanks so so so much for this.  I'm so so excited.
> On Oct 19, 2014, at 11:59 AM, Gordon Smith <gor...@mac-access.net> wrote:
> 
> Hello everyone!
> 
> At last! At long, long, last!  We finally have a suite of programmes which 
> are fully accessible, and which can make it possible for a serious 
> broadcaster requiring accessibility to use their Mac as a broadcast system.  
> When I first looked at this software way back in 2010, all I got was the 
> usual “Unknown, Unknown, Unknown” when roaming through the various dialogues 
> and windows.  Now, however, the entire application has undergone a rewrite, 
> and accessibility is 100%.  You can do all of the things I’d expect of a 
> broadcasting system, including using a dedicated player as a cart machine.
> 
> It would have been nice, and I shall be talking to the developer about this 
> in the next few days, if we could have had a way to easily import 
> pre-selected carts into the dedicated player so that frequently used ones can 
> be accessed without having to re-queue each time.  But given the power of 
> this app, that really is a minor issue.
> 
> There is a superb audio ducking system in this app, the best I’ve ever seen 
> on any software solution on any platform.  The nearest comparison I can draw 
> here is with my Behringer Audio DJ mixer, and that device absolutely rocks!
> 
> The ducking depth can be adjusted, but the default is really well chosen.  
> What I like about this app, amongst other things, is the ability to configure 
> multiple preference sets, so that you can use them for different situations 
> without having to bother about changing things all the time.  If you don’t 
> like the default keyboard shortcuts, you can change them to what suits you 
> best.  When used alongside something like “iVolume” or even the iTunes Sound 
> Check, the output really does have a good dynamic edge to it. Not quite as 
> good as OTS AV on Windows, but very very close to it.  Certainly, it is 
> better than things like Station Playlist, etc.
> 
> Another nice feature is the ability to see how long you need to speak for in 
> order to fit your tracks into a typical 6-minute rotation.  The playlist can 
> dynamically adapt, when used in conjunction with the Advance Schedular which 
> the application uses to create very highly customisable playlists.  You can 
> run a 24/7 automated station with this thing, and it stays in sync, other 
> apps fall down on this point, but this one is very very accurate.
> 
> If your musical genre is not one where you need to do many voiceovers, you 
> can just use the thing by pressing a couple of keys to turn of automation and 
> to disable ducking.  If ducking is disabled, you don’t get the reduction in 
> your music level and, therefore, you don’t need to talk over the intros or 
> outtros of your tracks.  You can even publish your station’s activity, live, 
> via either the web, or via most of the social networks; Twitter, Facebook, 
> etc.  You don’t even have to fiddle around in order to set that up.  Do it 
> once, and you’re good to go.
> 
> I still need to give this a real run out, but I am confident that, finally, 
> at long long last, my quest to find a broadcast system for OS X is over.  Now 
> it should just be a case of learning all the ins and outs of the software, 
> and then going on air live.  Oh yes, and I forgot to mention.  There is 
> built-in support for streaming codecs such as NiceCast, Shoutcast, and 
> Live365.  So you can publish, stream, and produce stunning audio.  Oh, I 
> forgot, you can also adjust your tracks’ overall pitch by about 5% each way 
> so that you get a mega-smooth transition with the track that went before it 
> and the track that comes after.  If you do that properly, the listener won’t 
> notice.  They actually do that on commercial radio, I’m not sure whether many 
> people know that, but they do.
> 
> Anyway, I’ll be giving this a run out later in the week so I’ll try and 
> pre-record a demo broadcast so that you can hear for yourself just how nice 
> and smooth this thing sounds.  It supports multiple output and input devices, 
> so that you can, for instance, use one for VoiceOver and your Mac’s internal 
> sounds, and another dedicated to Radiologic.  It also supports 
> MIDI-controlled mixing, including jog wheel FX and whatever else your 
> controller is capable of doing.
> 
> Sorry this overview has been a little like a ramble, but I just wrote it 
> on-the-fly, without taking the time to structure my thoughts.  But I’m 
> excited about this as a broadcaster because finally, without paying really 
> top prices, we have something that will mix it with the best of them.  I have 
> personally tried software on Windows which costs literally thousands of 
> Dollars, and it doesn’t sound as good as this thing does.  For example, 
> Myriad, which is the software that 99% of professionals use in their studios, 
> Myriad doesn’t come across as smooth as this and even for the small networks 
> that thing costs almost $1500 US for just a year’s hire.  Wow, finally, we 
> rock the boat!  Bring on RadioLogik, and it’s worth dropping the developer a 
> line as I plan too, in order to start a dialogue with him.  There are just 
> one or two little areas where I think he could clean it up a little.  But 
> nothing major, he’s developed this with online broadcasting in mind, and it 
> shows!  Have a listen to this if you want proof.  There are some tutorials 
> available on line in video, but they demonstrate just how good the audio is. 
> <http://www.radiologik.com> and there are links to the download site from 
> there.  yes, it does cost a couple of hundred Dollars.  But that’s as nothing 
> compared to what they cost under Windows.  Even Station Playlist Creator, Sam 
> Broadcaster and OTS AV will set you back more than that.
> 
> Gordon
> 
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