n-Track Studio

n-Track Studio by n-Track Software is a multitrack audio editing, digital audio workstation (DAW) program for Microsoft Windows, OS X, Android and iOS.

n-Track Studio
Developer(s)n-Track Software
Stable release
v9.0.5 Beta Build 3600 / April 1, 2019 (2019-04-01)[1]
Operating systemMicrosoft Windows, OS X, macOS, iOS and Android
TypeHost/Digital audio workstation
LicenceProprietary
Websitentrack.com

n-Track Studio's capabilities include unlimited audio and MIDI tracks, up to 192kHz 24-bit high-definition (HD DVD, Blu-ray, etc.) audio recording, extensive plug-in support, and DVD-Video surround mixing up to 7.1 channel. It has native support for 64-bit CPU architecture computer systems.

History

The first version of n-Track was released sometime between 1995 and 1996. It was originally a simple dialog box with 4 volume sliders for each of the 4 supported tracks. At the time when version 1.0 was released multitrack recording was still largely done on tape decks or professional digital workstations. Major music software of the time (such as Cubase or Cakewalk) still didn't have audio capabilities and were mostly MIDI only, while audio editors (e.g. Cool Edit and Sound Forge) were mainly concerned with off-line editing for sound design or broadcasting. Although since the mid 90s many other PC multitrack recording programs have emerged n-Track is still quite popular, as it provides a cutting-edge DAW feature set for less than US$100.

In June 2010 n-Track Software released the first version of n-Track for OS X. In 2011 n-Track Software released n-Track Studio for iOS. In October 2013 n-Track Software released n-Track Studio for Android.

Version 8 was released in 2016.[2] n-Track Studio 9.0 was released in 2018.[3][4][5]

gollark: I'm talking about querying spirits automatically, doing it manually would be irritating.
gollark: Hmm, I should probably have asked before, what information can they access? What kind of error rate?
gollark: What kind of hardware do you need to run yes/no questions against arbitrary spirits? How fast do they operate?
gollark: Well, you could easily get around that by only asking very accurately specified questions. In bulk, probably, with some spirits being assigned the same one in case of errors.
gollark: What's the actual difference between "good" and "bad" ones? Do the bad ones answer questions wrong more often?

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.