SRSLab’s New Audio Essentials Let’s Your Mac Pump Up the Volume and Quality

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Audio Essentials

When Apple first announced the new MacBook Pro with retina display they stressed that it was the best notebook they have ever built AND it had the best speakers they have ever put into a Mac notebook. After almost two weeks I can confidently say that this is absolutely the best computer I have ever used. At the same time, if these are the best speakers they have ever put into a Mac it says a lot for just how bad things were previously but says little about the audio coming from the MBPr. To be fair, it isn’t just the speakers that a pretty lousy, no, it is the audio processing that pushes the sound to the speakers. How do I know that is the case? Simple, I’ve been using a Beta version of SRS Labs Audio Essentials for Mac since I got the notebook and with Audio Essentials turned on the sound goes from “total crap” to “I can live with this on the road if need be”.

Audio Essentials is officially launched today and if you own a Mac by advice is to ger the free trial, use it for a few days and then spend the $29.99 entry price and load it on your Mac. Honestly, once you listen to your Mac with AE turned on you won’t be happy with the sound that natively flows from your OS X machine.

Audio Essentials for Mac is:

an advanced software suite of high-performance audio processing solutions designed to give any Mac computer the ability to fill a room with powerful, HD-quality sound. Loaded with a complete assortment of fully customizable SRS audio enhancement solutions, SRS Audio Essentials for Mac works seamlessly with the entire Mac audio system, giving users full control of their entire audio experience, regardless of where they source content from.

There is a simplified window that lets you control just the basics.

Audio Essentials

The options are good however and cover a lot of ground. If you want more control you can go into the deeper settings with the push of a button. That yields a screen that looks like this

Audio Essentials

It includes a full equalizer.

Audio Essentials

It also lets you control the audio across the spectrum of sound coming from the computer so that one song isn’t quiet while another one blasts away. That’s a good think but be warned from the start, turning on the application makes things much much louder. In other words, don’t try it for the first time while someone is sleeping in the next room.

As the company explains in this morning’s Press Release,

SRS Audio Essentials breathes new life into music, movies, games, podcasts and more. Working in conjunction with the entire Mac audio system, any content played on the Mac, including content streamed and downloaded, will be enhanced with SRS’ patented psychoacoustic technologies to not only deliver an incredibly lifelike, immersive audio experience, but to also compensate for the physical limitations that impact audio performance that are inherent with majority of today’s ultra slim notebook and all-in-one desktop designs. Audio Essentials takes into account multiple variables when processing audio, including the type of content being played, size and number of speakers, style of headphones being used and the content source. It then mixes in the optimal amount of psychoacoustic processing, bass enhancement, sound field expansion and vocal intelligibility solutions for that specific mix. The end result is audio quality at its absolute best, allowing music to be heard just like if it were being performed live, or movies and games feeling more immersive and realistic than ever before.

The free trial offers a chance to become familiar with the UI and get a sense of the audio processing on a limited scale. Upgrading to the paid version, what they refer to as “Complete” gets you:

Music Genre Detection – Audio Essentials automatically syncs with iTunes and Windows Media Player to detect the genre of music being played and adjusts the tuning presets accordingly

Advanced matrix surround sound decoding for surround sound speaker systems

Virtualized 360 degree surround sound over headphones

Intelligent volume leveling and volume maximization

Optimized Configurations for movies, games and voice/audiobooks.

Presets for several popular speaker configurations

Customizable Graphic EQ with bass, mid-range and treble settings

Full-function 5.1 peak meter – graphically displays audio activity for 5 channels

Audio Essentials
You can check out both versions of Audio Essentials on the SRS Labs website.

MSRP: Complete version is $29.99

What I Like: Makes a huge difference in the sound quality; Simple settings but many of them if you want more control; Cool interface

What Needs Improvement: Nothing, it makes a huge difference in the sound coming from the computer and is under $30

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About the Author

Dan Cohen
Having a father who was heavily involved in early laser and fiber-optical research, Dan grew up surrounded by technology and gadgets. Dan’s father brought home one of the very first video games when he was young and Dan remembers seeing a “pre-release” touchtone phone. (When he asked his father what the “#” and “*” buttons were his dad said, “Some day, far in the future, we’ll have some use for them.”) Technology seemed to be in Dan’s blood but at some point he took a different path and ended up in the clergy. His passion for technology and gadgets never left him. Dan is married to Raina Goldberg who is also an avid user of Apple products. They live in New Jersey with their golden doodle Nava.

3 Comments on "SRSLab’s New Audio Essentials Let’s Your Mac Pump Up the Volume and Quality"

  1. After experimenting with this for a few weeks, it does have one unfortunate and unlisted drawback. It artificially makes the music sound worse when you turn it off, and lowers the over all volume.

  2. Did anyone compare it to “Boom” (can be found in the Mac App Store)? It does something similar for only 5 $ instead of 30. Is the price difference justified?
    Boom also uses a lot of CPU, sometimes even when not active; what about Audio Essentials?
    Thank you in advance!

    • I used Boom and hated it and it doesn’t do much to aid in the overall sound so I guess my quick answer without doing a side by side is yes, the price is justified.

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