
When recording an interview in Skype or iChat, your voice, recorded locally through your microphone, needs different post-processing from your remote subject’s voice, which comes in at a lower quality. These are added to the virtual device and mixed together. When you create a new WireTap Anywhere device, select an audio source, which can be any physical device built-in or attached to your computer, or any application currently running. WireTap Anywhere appears as a System Preferences pane that lists any and all devices you have created. Better yet, do you have friends or family members who use different audio chat software? You can use WireTap Anywhere to link iChat and Skype together and initiate a conference call between yourself and people using Skype and iChat at the same time.Ĭreating these virtual input devices is deceptively simple. So, for example, you could have a conversation in iChat where you’re speaking into a microphone and playing something you created in GarageBand. You can also route audio to any program that can accept it. What’s new and different here is that you aren’t limited to grabbing audio from specific sources for recording purposes. You can do this already using Ambrosia’s own WireTap Studio or Rogue Amoeba’s Audio Hijack Pro. For example, you could specify iTunes, Skype, and your microphone together as a single device, enabling you to record the live combination of your voice, the voice of a remote person over Skype, and background music in GarageBand. WireTap Anywhere lets you define your own virtual input devices, which are made up of any and all sources you care to add to them. Typically, audio recording software requires you to choose your audio input device – generally a microphone, either built-in or attached to your computer.
#Wiretap anywhere full#
WireTap Anywhere gives you full control over exactly what audio can be recorded in your preferred audio recording software (GarageBand, QuickTime Pro, Sound Studio, etc.).
#Wiretap anywhere Patch#
