Hear it loud and clear
The built in speakers that come with Apple’s notebooks are fine for most basic audio tasks. And if you want better sound you could hook up a set of external speakers. But external speakers aren’t always an option and that shouldn’t mean that you have to give up on better sound. With Hear, you can add some slick audio processing to make your notebook speakers sound bigger than what they really are.
Hear uses digital signal processing (DSP) to shape the audio coming from your applications (iTunes or DVD player) giving them a much needed boost in equalization and reverb allowing your music or movie to sound its best with the notebook speakers.
To make things easy, Hear has packaged a variety of presents to get you going. If you’re the tweaking type, you can adjust the knobs and faders till you get the sound you’re after.
In our testing we found the processing fine for most audio content and really enjoyed the phantom center channel option giving a weighted anchor to all the movies we watched.
Hear isn’t only for your built in speakers, it also works great with headphones or external speakers. But if all you have is the notebook built in speakers, Hear will definitely make them sound better.
If you’re a web designer or someone that deals with audio or video, you know how important having the right sound effect is to your production. Sound effects should be given the same amount of thought and care as the other parts of your project. But if you’re not in the business of sound, where do you go? You go to soundsnap.



Some say that the use of ambient sounds can help you focus before a test or help you sleep better at night. We’re not sure if this is true or not but a cottage industry has emerged in the belief that it does.
If you ever made a music mix on your computer you know there are many ways to go about it. There are applications that simulate turntables giving you that analog feel or those that draw out waveforms so you can align the songs the way you want them to be played back. But one common aspect between these types of applications are that you really have to pay attention to the tempo to get them synced together.
Have you ever heard some music, be it in the background in a shop, or played on the radio and ever wished you knew the track’s name? That’s the dilemma Shazam sets out to solve.