![]() Krisp with Vacuum had some minor distortion when he had vacuum cleaner in between his mouth and microphone!!! (Which he did not do for RTX. Krisp clearly killed it off completely.Īs far as voice being clear. And when it is closer to mic, it is quite loud. Same goes for Vacuum where you can hear it even as he moves it as far as he can reach. RTX does worse job filtering out keyboard even on 100% than Krisp. Then, you read captions on video incorrectly. It's same as saying that 4C/4T are perfectly fine for gaming because someone who uses them does not notice problem on his subset of use. Especially when I specifically talked about those who need all GPU horsepower already! Obviously Nvidia is probably not going to offer that because they are essentially selling this as a value-add for RTX owners but I don't see the problem when they are offering as a free plugin.Ĭlick to expand.1st, it is fallacious statement that just because someone does not need full GPU performance, it is OK for everyone. It was trained via cuDNN and we already know the inference from cuDNN can be ported to various other hardware. So clearly even with expensive microphones (arguably the best microphone there is) it's still useful. You keep saying "get a better mic" but in the video above we see a guy who has a Shure SM7B, a $400 microphone, who not only demonstrates that it has value even with that microphone but says before this released he used various other noise suppressing software/hardware. So it's not just improving your $x microphone but in use cases like the one I mentioned above (content creators) it's improving everyone's $2 microphone, including people that don't have RTX cards. ![]() This cancels noise on outgoing and incoming audio streams. I know a few of them that use Krisp, which is a paid software and as demonstrated this seems to do the job better, for free (as long as you have an RTX card). They typically aren't playing games when the podcast/stream is going so the idea that it even uses any GPU % is pretty irrelevant for them. I watch tons of podcasts/twitch streams that feature 2-12 sometimes more people chatting on microphones - most of these streamers/podcasters, the good ones, already employ various noise cancellation/compression software on the stream to improve the quality. IMHO, it sound fantastic, completely distinguishable from the first sample, to the point it sounds like a different microphone. ReaFIR can be turned up, but it makes my voice sound terrible.ģrd is with RTX Voice at 75%, EqualizerAPO stays on with the same settings, but the ReaFIR VST is disabled. I had to fully close RTX Voice and relaunch, then it's fine.ĮDIT: Here's my 3 way comparison at the moment.ġst is just the 'raw' $40 Blue Snowball ICE.Ģnd is with EqualizerAPO boosted settings, along with ReaFIR (classic free VST) to clean up noise. Uncheaking my mic from the RTX Voice app made it worse. When I reopened Audacity to try another recording, all I got was VERY loud fuzz. I closed the RTX Voice window (which minimizes to the system tray and stays active). ![]() I was messing with settings, making recordings. Thought that was curious.ĮDIT: Had another strange issue. It goes to that memory usage immediately, not over time. Though I did notice a lot of memory usage. It sounds fantastic with what I already had setup. I've got a great EqualizerAPO setup for this thing. I use a Blue Snowball ICE, the even cheaper version of the cheap and popular USB microphone.
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