That was very informative, straight to the point and little to no detours.
@MemoriesGamer6122 күн бұрын
Remember your pc is your friend also your pet you need clean it, take care and check up daily
@CallMeTeci4 күн бұрын
You are uploading that one on both channels? :o Welp... then let me copy my comment as well. ;D " The thing with mics is - its much more complicated than "USB vs XLR" and "Dynamic vs Condenser" and "Cheap vs Expensive". The only mics i would consider really being directional are Shotgun-Mics, but those are imo not for beginners. ALL other mics will record a shit load of environment and background noises if they dont get the proper software-treatment. I got plenty of mics into my hands and there is a clear overlap of Dynamics and Condensers, where some high-sensitive Dynamics record much more sound around you, than some of the less sensitive or well isolated Condensers, like the King Bee 2 that im currently using for example. (not to mention different polar patterns, how much echo your room has and so on). And i havent even touched on the part where mics are like shoes for your voice. There are many expensive high quality mics out there, but that does not mean that they will fit your voice. A good example is imo when Shylily switched from the Quadcast (USB Condenser) to the SM7B (XLR Dynamic) and suddenly all her really fitting high frequencies were way muddier than before. And i consider that a sidegrade, if not even a downgrade (for +-500 bucks that is). Then people need to understand how audio works in general and everything that has an effect on it. Your voice -> the Mic -> the PreAmp/Interface -> the Processing (EQ, Compressor etc.) -> the compression from the recording programs and editing software and later from KZbins transcoding or the streaming sites attempts to safe bandwidth -> to the audio-device that a viewer is listening to, because no Mic can save your audio quality if your viewer listens to you on a smartphone speaker. xD Could talk about this for ages. ;D btw. careful with "audio-engineers". They often have COMPLETELY different use cases and ideas how "good audio" sounds. Many videos ive watched from so called experts tend to completely overcrank the post processing and especially the compression, so you always end up with this "radio-sound". Or even worse, when they recommend you to use neutral sounding headphones, which are great for music-production, but BAAAD for the average person wanting to edit their videos or quickly monitor their voice. "