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Røden uutuus, USB johdolla toimiva studiomikki, jossa on myös
kuulokevahvistin sis. rakennettuna, eli USB johto kiinni tietokoneen ja
mikin väliin ja äänitys voi alkaa, 3,5 mm. minijakilla saat kuulokkeet
kiinni ja kuulokkeille on myös oma volumesäädin, latenssiton
(viiveetön) monitorointi.
Sis. USB johdon, adapterin ja Windows ja Mac softan, 18 bittinen resoluutio.
Røde's new Podcaster mic at first seems like just another entry in the
parade of USB mics from companies including Samson, MXL, and BLUE.
O?Reilly podcaster Chris Adamson even tried a Logitech PlayStation mic
recently.
What made me stop at the Rode booth was that company?s reputation for
high-quality mics. I figured it had a fresh take on the genre ? and I
was right.
The advantage of USB mics is that they perform the analog-to-digital
conversion outside the noisy confines of your computer, resulting in a
cleaner sound and less gear to carry. The disadvantage was something I
didn?t think about until I tried the Rode: With USB, there?s always a
delay, or latency, between the time you speak and the time the computer
finishes processing the sound and spits it back out to your headphones.
My USB headset doesn?t even bother to play my mic signal through the
headphones, which I find annoying. But if it did, I?d surely find the
delay even more annoying.
Rode?s solution is ingenious: Put an analog passthrough on the mic
itself. You plug your headphones into the side of the mic, adjust a
knob to set the listening level, and then hear your voice with zero
latency. The arrow in the photo above shows the location of the
headphone knob and jack.
The shape of the Podcaster evokes the popular EV RE20 broadcast mic,
and the specs (PDF file) show a hefty bump around 10kHz, which should
give it a crisp sound. On the trade-show floor, I liked the way it
sounded on my voice, as well as the way the cardiod pattern reduced the
noise around me. I asked Rode about getting a review unit, so I hope to
share my findings in a more realistic recording environment soon.
One thing I?m curious about is the ?analogue signal conditioning?
mentioned in the specs; a potential downside of USB mics is that you
can?t run them through analog compressors, de-essers and EQ before
going to disk. Rode is apparently also offering a podcast-hosting
service at RodePodcaster.com.
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