9/24/2023 0 Comments Audio hijack time shift![]() The new controls allow you to exclude specific sources manually, to capture “All system audio except X”. The System Audio input block has always allowed you to capture all audio playing on your Mac, but now it’s much more customizable. As well, when it’s detached, the visable columns can now be customized and their widths can be adjusted. Like the Session List, it behaves more like a Finder window, with new columns and enhanced sorting. This window has also seen substantial updates. Sessions are also found in Audio Hijack’s global window, which lives in the menu bar to provide access even when the app is in the background: The Session List now looks and acts more like a standard Finder window in List view, and that’s very nice. More Sorting Options: It’s now possible to sort based on additional columns, not just the session name. Most notably, the Meters column can be resized between 5 and 30 bars wide. Optional New Columns: Audio Hijack now has columns for Recordings (A count of recordings found in each session) and Timers (A count of timers in each session), as well as a new stand-alone Meters column.Īdjustable Column Widths: You can now change the width of any column in the Session List. That window has now been greatly enhanced.Ĭustomizable Columns: Now you can customize the exact columns shown in the Session List, by clicking the view options button. The Overhauled Session List (And Global Window)Īudio Hijack automatically saves your sessions for re-use, displaying them in its Session List window. ![]() Read on for details or just click to download immediately. It’s available now as a free update for all Audio Hijack 4 users, and it contains an astonishing 53 enhancements. Today, we’re thrilled to show off the first of those releases: Audio Hijack 4.1. When we shipped Audio Hijack 4.0 last year, we also had a roadmap for further releases containing additional features and enhancements. But even with all the clicking, Audio Hijack made my job a lot easier-and got the transcript out much faster.Posted By Paul Kafasis on January 20th, 2023 I’d love it if Rogue Amoeba could add some keyboard shortcuts to Time Shift, so I didn’t have to keep clicking the back button manually every time I failed to keep up with Tim Cook. During Cook’s prepared remarks, I ended up several minutes behind the live stream, but by skipping over Apple CFO Luca Maestri’s remarks and the questions of analysts, I managed to catch up to nearly live before the end of the call. In order to make this work, I use Audio Hijack’s Time Shift block, which lets me pause and rewind the audio I’m capturing-TiVo style!-as I listen. A few minutes after the call was complete, I had a full transcript. This time, I just started transcribing when the call started. For past calls, I’ve taken notes during the call and then played back a recording in iTunes later, filling in the gaps. To keep the turnaround between the analyst call and the posting of my transcript as short as possible, I use Rogue Amoeba’s excellent Audio Hijack, which I reviewed here in January. In any event, although I am now “fast-typing Jason Snell” according to John Gruber 1, I can’t type as fast as Tim Cook can read the prepared remarks that open the analyst call 2. People seem to like reading them, and they’re a convenient reference for writing follow-up stories. Not everyone has the time or inclination to listen to a conference call, and yet amid the boredom of analysts asking for more color about foreign exchange headwinds, there are often some very interesting tidbits about how Apple’s business is working and what Apple’s priorities are. Yesterday Tim Cook spoke on a conference call with analysts and, as I have for the last few years, I typed what he said and posted it somewhere. Note: This story has not been updated for several years. ![]() Transcribing Tim Cook nearly in real time
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