Nearly at the top (and nearly first in the chain), there's the EQ section. The **lo-cut** is again
well-known from the simple audio mode (the filter is separate for each
bus, the cutoff **frequency** is the same across all buses),
-but there's now also a simple **three-band EQ** per bus. Simply ask the speaker
+but there's now also a simple **three-band EQ** per bus. Ask the speaker
to talk normally for a bit, and tweak the controls until it sounds good.
People have different voices and different ways of holding the microphone,
and if you have a reasonable ear, you can use the EQ to your advantage to
controller and number numbers the different physical knobs and faders
emit, inputting these numbers by hand can be a frustrating procedure.
(Actually, even with a reference sheet, it probably is.) Thus, the preferred
-way is by autosensing; simply select the given mapping with the mouse
+way is by autosensing; select the given mapping with the mouse
and use the control you want to bind it to, and Nageru automatically
fills it in.
when starting up Nageru for the first time, where the controllers
are not necessarily in the place matching Nageru's startup settings.)
Some more expensive controllers support *motorized faders*, where
-the host can simply tell the control to move to the right place
+the host can tell the control to move to the right place
and thus solve the problem, but Nageru does not currently support them.
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