I heard Magix has very good restoration and noise reduction software, but don't know what it would mean for accessibility. I'm surprised Sony kept a team in Wisconsin this long, my home state, and near the state capitol of Madison at that. That was one area I never knew we were known for here, software that has been one of the leading audio editors in Sound Forge. It does make sense to keep them around though as they know the software they built the best and how it was written. I hope this Magix company keeps things going. I never understood why Sony would've bought that stuff, being that they are more in movies and TV in that end of production, but they must've thought they could do something with it at the time.

----- Original Message ----- From: "Dane Trethowan" <grtd...@internode.on.net>
To: "PC Audio Discussion List" <pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Friday, July 08, 2016 11:41 PM
Subject: Sony Creative Software Sells Majority of Products to MAGIX SoftwareGmbH


Changing Names and Chaing Times but will the products change too? One can only wait and see.
http://www.sonycreativesoftware.com/news/pressreleases/2016/sony-creative-software-sell-products-to-magix

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