Avid announces new tools for Pro Tools

Aug 20, 2010 5:11 PM

             
Avid’s new Pro Tools HD products include the HD I/O, available with a choice of analog or digital connectivity.

Avid’s new Pro Tools HD products include the HD I/O, available with a choice of analog or digital connectivity.

Avid has announced a series of new hardware and software solutions to enhance the quality and performance of its Pro Tools HD. The new HD Series hardware interfaces include the HD I/O, HD OMNI and HD MADI. On the software side, Avid now offers HEAT (Harmonically Enhanced Algorithm Technology), intended to add vintage analog sound to the Pro Tools mixer via a single global control and eliminating the task of managing plug-in changes across multiple tracks.

HD I/O, HD OMNI and HD MADI interfaces for Pro Tools HD enable customers to achieve the highest-quality audio with improvements to digital audio conversion quality, a variety of new configuration options and increased support for open digital standards like the MADI protocol. Features include advances in design, filtering and clocking and flexible digital connectivity. Additionally, Curv, a new soft-knee analog limiter in HD OMNI and HD I/O, reduces rerecording and editing time by tracking hotter signals when recording, preventing distortion when overloading inputs.

HD I/O helps achieve the highest-quality audio record and playback and offers three space-saving configurations: 16 x 16 analog, 16 x 16 digital and 8 x 8 x 8 analog and digital, in a 2RU interface.

The new HD OMNI integrates the functionality of numerous outboard components into a single unit for recording, mixing and monitoring. Features include state-of-the-art conversion, two world-class mic preamps, a full-featured surround monitor section and a 14 x 26-channel persistent mixer that functions even when the computer is off.

HD MADI is designed to speed production time for broadcast, live sound and post production by connecting Pro Tools HD systems to industry-standard MADI infrastructures without the need for a format converter. Built-in sample rate conversion allows an integrated workflow with multiple sample rates (upstream and downstream) in a 64-channel 1RU interface.

Designed in collaboration with digital/analog engineer Dave Hill of Crane Song, Avid’s new HEAT software option for Pro Tools HD systems is an innovation for mixers who value the warmth and sound qualities of tubes, tape machines and analog consoles in the software domain. HEAT users can add the analog warmth to every track in the Pro Tools mixer using a single, global control, dramatically enhancing sound quality and improving settings management.




Want to use this article?
Click here for options!
Get Copyright Clearance

Share this article

blog comments powered by Disqus

 


Current Issue

A view from the top

January 2012

Some of broadcast's brightest reveal where the industry is headed.

Read More articles...

Related Newsletter

Audio Technology Update
A twice-monthly newsletter about audio technology.

Related Posts


Confused about the terminology in an article? Find definitions of common terms and abbreviations in Broadcast Engineering's Glossary.

 


Submit your product for our NAB coverage.

Resources

Broadcast Engineering Newsletters Broadcast Engineering Essential Guides Broadcast Engineering White Papers Broadcast Engineering Videos Broadcast Engineering Podcasts Broadcast Engineering Industry Calendar

Industry Calendar

Broadcast Engineering Glossary of Terms

Glossary

Broadcast Engineering RSS feed

RSS

Interactive Media

Broadcast Engineering Webinars Broadcast Engineering Training Broadcast Engineering Blogs Broadcast Engineering Mobile Apps Broadcast Engineering on Facebook

Facebook

Broadcast Engineering JobZone

JobZone

Broadcast Engineering BE Roll

Blog

Featured Products

A Broadcaster's Guide To Camera & Lens Technology

A Broadcaster's Guide To Camera & Lens TechnologyThis eBook provides both new and veteran shooters an in-depth understanding of the technology that lies between the camera lens and the recording medium and how to maximize a camera's performance.

File Based Technology and Workflow

File Based Technology and WorkflowFile-based technologies have replaced video tape methods for a majority of production and broadcast operations. The worlds of AV and IT are coalescing to create new methods and workflows for media

Digital Television Fundamentals

Digital Television FundamentalsThis course, written by broadcast engineer Phil Cianci, provides a basic tutorial platform on the hows and whys of ATSC digital operation.

Video Compression, Editing and Displays

Video Compression, Editing and DisplaysVideo compression, editing and displays is an in-depth tutorial on MPEG compression technology, editing MPEG content and evaluating color video monitors written by long-time video expert, trainer and writer Steve Mullen, Ph. D.

 

 

Sound Off Podcasts

Erik Moreno, co-general manager of the Mobile Content Venture

MCV racks up successes on way to bright mobile DTV future

2012 will be the year of mobile DTV. That’s the view of Erik Moreno, who along with Salil Dalvi, senior VP for Mobile Platform Development at NBC Universal, is co-general manager of the Mobile Content Venture.

Danny Wilson

OTT year in review

Hear snippets of podcast interviews done throughout 2011 with Pat McDonough of The Nielsen Company, Glen Friedman of Ideas & Solutions!, Danny Wilson of Pixelmetrix and Greg Herman of Watch TV. Pictured is Danny Wilson, Pixelmetrix.

 

Broadcast Engineering Digital Reference Guide

Browse Back Issues

Back to Top