I miss the days when one bought software on a disk, copied it to the computer, and set it to running without messing around with registries and authorizations and portals and other related folderol invented for the sole benefit of the software publishers. Maybe this is a test to see if the buyer has enough savvy to master the software in use. At the moment I'm just cycling through a seemingly endless circle of screens that tell me this or that status but don't let me do anything. At the moment, I'm stuck I fumbled my way through installing something called iLok, which apparently is nothing to do with Izotope itself but is necessary to get the software to install, and then the Izotope product portal, which is necessary to get the software loaded onto my computer, and then actually installed the software, but now it tells me I must "authorize" it through the iLok thing "and don't forget to transfer the license," and I haven't yet figured out how to make either of those processes work or even what I'm trying to accomplish. Word of warning for those who may do likewise, however: this software has the most ridiculously complicated process for downloading and installing that I have ever encountered. (A week or two after you buy the $29 version, you'd get a discount offer for the full RX 8 for $199 instead of $399.)īuy iZotope RX 8 Elements Audio Repair | Sound Editing/Production SoftwareĬlick to expand.I went ahead and bought a copy thanks for the heads up. I'd guess that over a year, one third of the time it is on sale for $29. There is Izotope RX Elements which often is on sale for $29, but at the moment it is the normal $129. Izotope RX is better but at 13x the price it should be. It's a beginner program but there is plenty in there to do great things or serious damage. You get 3 chances to save a processed file before you pay and register it, but if you don't save anything you can always play with its features and controls. Download the trial, load a WAV file, then experiment, click the Play icon (not "Preview" but try that and hear what happens) and "Customize" and there is much to play around with as you listen in real time. It has declick, and several other types of audio processing, which are all adjustable and can be previewed in (split second delay) real time.
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