![]() ![]() ![]() 1 Prior to 2016 MDR/RR-TB patients in Armenia were not systematically tested for HCV infection and the prevalence of HCV among MDR/RR-TB patients was unknown. Diagnostic confirmation of HCV was not funded by the state, and there was no national protocol to treat HCV. ![]() I use a Cedar when I work on large mix stages, but in my home studio I use a combination of WNS and Izotope RX.Ĩ There was an overall lack of HCV treatment, and interferon analogues were the only treatment options available to patients.ĭuring 2016–2018, a model of care integrating chronic HCV diagnosis and treatment for MDR/RR-TB patients was introduced in the country. All of these noise reduction tools are useful when used appropriately. Of course, if I had to pick one, I'd go for the cedar, but I can't justify the cost to buy one for my home studio. I've mixed several projects using only WNS for NR, and they have turned out great. The difference between all of these tools and the Waves NS1 however, is that Cedar, WNS and Izotope all have multiple parameters that can be adjusted in varying degrees to find the right touch of NR for a particular scene.that being said, too much Noise reduction, even on a Cedar sucks the life out of dialogue and sounds crappy.Īnyways, regarding the NS1. It has 1 fader, which to me, feels like it would probably utilize NR algorithms that are too broad for any kind of detail work. However, I haven't used it.so I can't say that it doesn't do an ok job for its price point. I've decided to demo NS1 myself so here's a quick review: Maybe it's a good tool for micro budget projects.there's certainly a lot of those around these days. 2: To my ears it behaves like an automatic version of WNS in wide band mode - just as some have predicted. It leaves similar artifacts especially apparent on reverb tails and 'quiet bits'. WNS is significantly better (I actually seem to like WNS in certain situations despite owning a hardware Cedar) in that you can control each band independently whereas NS1 is stuck in wide band mode and can sometimes cause more problems than it solves. 3: I can see it being useful in super fast scenarios where you need to quickly shave off a few dBs off a less than ideal VO that you've just received from another place that needs to get out the door in 10 minutes. For budget promos, commercials or what not. I guess at $99 it's quite a good deal for that. ![]()
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