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219 points zdw | 6 comments | | HN request time: 0.001s | source | bottom
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7373737373 ◴[] No.45897366[source]
Does this finally fix the shitty audio quality when using a wireless headset's microphone?
replies(7): >>45897401 #>>45897645 #>>45897675 #>>45898017 #>>45898237 #>>45898643 #>>45899129 #
1. hanikesn ◴[] No.45897645[source]
https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/windowsosplatform/c...

This can already be done with LE audio, support is coming slowly.

replies(1): >>45899140 #
2. jofzar ◴[] No.45899140[source]
I can't believe in that blog they use a simulated video. How hard is it Microsoft to have literally someone talking in a mic connected to two different laptops seriously.
replies(2): >>45899499 #>>45900602 #
3. gjsman-1000 ◴[] No.45899499[source]
It isn’t.

It’s that when you have legal agreements with guilds and unions, even produced promotional material can be considered a production requiring minimum staff (I.e. makeup, camera technician, etc.) On productions, any person wearing multiple hats is tightly controlled.

A cartoon I watched growing up ran into this when they needed to insert live action, so they deliberately recorded at 1 FPS for that episode to make it ineligible for budget reasons (https://phineasandferb.fandom.com/wiki/Tri-Stone_Area).

If you’re ever wondering why a company can’t do something simple and obvious, it’s probably due to a legal agreement.

replies(1): >>45902251 #
4. zamadatix ◴[] No.45900602[source]
Can a bluetooth mic connect wideband to one laptop and normal to another at the same time? Regardless, the simulation is very accurate IME. It is, after all, all digital anyways.
5. rat9988 ◴[] No.45902251{3}[source]
Weird tangent here. Nobody expects software engineers to participate in a promotional video for their product.
replies(1): >>45902601 #
6. ashtakeaway ◴[] No.45902601{4}[source]
Weird response here. Everyone expects at least some level of marketing for their software product to perform financially.