![]() ![]() ![]() And finally, this is very easy to use software you'll barely, if at all, need the manual. Just about any audio file format (SD II, WAV, AIFF, etc.), audiodriverformat(ASIO,EASI,DirectI/O,etc.)and SCSI/Firewire CD burners are supported. But of course with VST support, you can go more high-end and use the Waves or Universal Audio plug- ins. I haven't used the denoiser or base expander, but the others sound great and have lots of parameters to tweak with. The other really nice thing about WBPro is that is supports VST plug-ins and comes with six native plug-ins for mastering: Compressor, five band parametric EQ, Denoiser, multi-band (up to four) compressor, stereo base expander and limiter. Dithering from 24 to 16 bits is done with the POWr algorithm, the main competitor to Apogee's UV22. You have total control over the fade shape for instance, and the new CD Text format is supported. ![]() All of this goes beyond the basics that you'd expect. It's also real easy to cross fade between two songs and to precisely set the index points that your CD player looks for. Graphic editing, or trimming the beginning and ending of each track is a piece of cake as are fade-ins and fade-outs. If you've been using Toast or Jam to burn CDs, you'll want to throw them away after you use WBPro. It only does one thing, but it does it really well: assemble, sequence and tweak two track mixes into Red Book compliant CDR masters. This is a beautifully useful and utilitarian piece of Macintosh software. ![]()
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