The whole GUI is simple and light, much more 'aired' and neatly-spaced than in most other similar applications and this adds some points to the final grade a clean, easy to use interface is sometimes much more valuable than the capabilities of the software. One thing was pretty clear from the very beginning: you don't have to be a sound engineer to learn the workings of the Nero Wave Editor in a few minutes. therefore Nero knew their way pretty well. And if we sit a bit and think, most users are home users.
and if you don't want to go higher, everything should be pretty OK but if you plan to go for the heavy stuff, forget about Nero, buy some professional, dedicated audio editing solution and do your job.Īmong the so many audio tracks editors out there, it seems that the one presented by Nero in the latest edition is one that brings the best of both worlds: it looks simple (some may read 'dumb') enough so almost anyone can start using it in just minutes, while offering enough options and processing power for the needs of a home-user. Much to my surprise, I encountered a Wave Editor loaded with features that will simply transform your living room in a small processing studio.
I must admit I wasn't expecting too much of a good thing out of the (still) monstrous new Nero suite, and definitely nothing fancy about the newly-introduced audio applications.