I just shipped a new Harmonic Exciter in Zenteek Player! If you've ever listened to older recordings or flat digital masters and felt the music was somehow veiled or pulled back, this is for you. One toggle, no knobs - flip it on and
If you have ever tried to "stereo-ize" a mono signal you know that most try to simply create width by applying a single effect on the entire spectrum and blurring the side energy in the process.
The audio pipeline has been redesigned from the ground up. The Crossfeed filter has been updated with a low-frequency shelf compensation and a new Settings window!
If you have ever listened to a record mixed for speakers through headphones, you have noticed something subtle but unsettling. The stereo image feels too wide, too hard. Instruments that
I've been wanting a proper crossfeed stage in Zenteek since the first day I started the project. Tonight it finally landed. There are four presets in Output Tools covering different
A weekend detour: Zenteek now has a full-screen Milkdrop visualizer. ProjectM-4 under the hood, classic Winamp-era presets reacting to whatever is playing.
Three things tonight, all of which have been on my list for weeks. First, the preamp simulator got a proportional waveshaper blend. In practical terms, this smooths out the loudness
Notifications got a redesign tonight. The old ones were fine, functionally, but they had that slightly-too-glossy feel that pulls your eye away from the track you're trying to listen to.
Autoplay has been slightly broken for longer than I care to admit. If you were navigating the library and the queue ran out, playback would just quietly stop. Technically correct
Info messages used to sit in the sidebar where the background process info lives, which meant that whenever the indexer was running you couldn't see what the app was trying
I've been measuring grid view performance for weeks and quietly grinding at it. Tonight the work paid off - grid views are now up to thirty times faster than they
Every few months someone asks me which lossless format they should rip their CDs into. FLAC, ALAC, or WAV. For the audio, it does not matter. All three decode to
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