iZotope ANR-B Is Here To Chew Gum And Adaptively Reduce Noise, And It's All Out Of Gum
Ted Terry from iZotope wanted us to listen to his new album, entitled "To Adaptively Noise Reduce Only Water For Ten Days." We were skeptical, until we realized that he was doing a demonstration of his company's new real-time noise reduction unit, the ANR-B.
After listening to noise that was no longer there, we headed over to the local AN-ARBY's to adaptively reduce our hunger, in real time. The effects were astonishing.
TED TERRY: Hi. My name is Ted Terry. I’m with Izotope. We’re an audio research company out of Cambridge, Massachusetts. This is ANR-B. It’s our realtime noise reduction box. This is a pretty drastic example. It’s just water in a bathroom over somebody talking, and if you hear we’re pulling that noise out in real time. So, it’s a high-signal noise ratio. It’s a very simple interface here. More suppression, less suppression. That’s pretty much it. It’s just a dead-simple solution for pulling noise out in real time. We’ve had our baby unit at WGBH in Boston when they’ve been receiving material from the BBC. They get it kind of over at [SOUNDS LIKE] ISTMI which purportedly has a lot of noise artifacts and [INDISCERNIBLE] updates. It’s been just kind of sitting at one setting and they’ve been happy with it for about a year.





Thanks
I just wanted to thank you for the very obtuse but funny Frusciante reference.
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