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Hi Annabelle! Sorry, no text-based knobs or sliders so I don't think it would work with a screenreader. Here's an example of the Samplitude Spectral Editor so you get the picture how it works: Stillwells Spectro work in a similar way, a great tool to have :) Regards Thomasĭoes it have text-based knobs and sliders that screenreaders can understand? The free Spectral Analyzer Span is a great tool Cactus Music :) but sound like Annabelle is looking for a Spectral Editor, to edit out unwanted noise, right? The Stillwell Audio's Spectro is an Spectral Editor VST plugin, fully functional to try: There are other Spectral Editors like SpectraLayers, iZotope RX and Samplitude has it built in but these are not plugins. That not only makes it possible to operate them by touch, but also makes it easier to replicate settings.Īnnabelle TotteG Hi again! To answer Annabelle's question on Spectral Analyzer & Spectral Editor, they are two different things. Have you considered hardware EQ? I have seen engineers tweak hardware equalizers without looking at them, because they know where the controls are and the knobs often have tactile feedback such as notched positions. The visual aspect of parametric equalizers is really just a convenience, or at least it's a convenience for sighted people. But the fact that each filter has specific parameters means you don't technically have to see them to manipulate them. I'm no expert, but I think the best approach for a non-sighted person is probably the good old parametric (or paragraphic) equalizer.
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It's meant to be used in conjunction with the traditional "spectral editor", an equalizer. A spectrum analyzer (usually) is not an editor, but rather just the visualization part. That is kind of the definition of a spectral editor: a visual representation of the spectrum that can be manipulated visually. I am having trouble imagining a spectral editor that isn't visual.