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Tag Archives: Podcasting

Cranborne Audio Debuts EC1 Preamp

Cranborne Audio EC1 Preamp
Cranborne Audio EC1 Preamp

Potters Bar, UK (October 21, 2020) — Cranborne Audio has introduced its new Camden EC1, a preamp with analog saturation and a headphone amplifier with a discrete line mixer built-in, all fit in a half-rack chassis, making it aimed at musicians, engineers, podcasters and voice-over artists.

The Camden EC1’s preamp design provides up to 68.5 dB of gain, allowing the preamp to pair with low-gain dynamic microphones and ribbon mics. Also on-board is a headphone amp with a dedicated line mixer to provide zero-latency monitoring of the preamp mixed with playback from a DAW.

Real-World Review: Cranborne Audio Camden 500 Mic Amp

At the turn of a dial, the Camden preamp takes on the persona of vintage transformer or valve-based preamps using its Mojo analog saturation control and ‘thump’ and ‘Cream’ styles. Users can split the Hi-z signal using the Link Output to record both the DI and a processed amp’d signal, allowing for reamping workflows. The unit’s connectivity includes balanced XLR and 1/4″ impedance-balanced preamp outputs and a 10 dB pad to prevent clipping converters.

VO artists and podcasters can monitor their vocal channel directly using headphones connected to the preamp itself, and apply Mojo analog saturation control to apply different characters to one’s voice—Thump can be used to create a sense of intimacy or Cream to underline excitement. Podcasters will be able to apply 68.5 dB of gain to low-sensitivity microphones, such as a Shure SM7b or EV RE20, reportedly without adding noise or coloration.

The Camden EC1 features the same reference-grade design developed for the 500R8 audio interface, and its headphone amps deliver up to 1.2 watts of clean power per ear and a flat frequency response from 5 Hz to 70 kHz.

Cranborne Audio • www.cranborne-audio.com

Driving Podcast Sound Design: ‘The Alarmist’ Makes Noise

Recording at Earios HQ, The Alarmist is hosted by Rebecca Delgado-Smith (right) with Chris Smith, live fact checker (center), seen here speaking with guest Erin Gibson.
Recording at Earios HQ, The Alarmist is hosted by Rebecca Delgado-Smith (right) with Chris Smith, live fact checker (center), seen here speaking with guest author/podcaster Erin Gibson (left).

New York, NY (October 15, 2020)—The premise of Earios podcast The Alarmist may be farcical—host Rebecca Delgado-Smith uses her “superpower” of catastrophizing to assign blame for infamous moments in history—but the show’s sound design isn’t all lighthearted.

While shifting weekly from topics like who’s to blame for prohibition to episodes on the NASA Challenger space shuttle disaster and the Oklahoma City bombing of 1995, producer Amanda Lund bends standard stock audio to her creative needs.

Amanda Lund
Producer Amanda Lund

“I have music that I pull from a royalty-free site, but I actually really love it,” Lund says. For the Challenger episode, she employs “very intense but almost neutral music, like drone beats,” while for other serious topics she plays the audio straight and digs up news clips if available. “Usually if there’s no news clips available, that means the tragedy happened like 100 years ago and it’s probably okay to be a little bit lighter in tone with it.”

Case in point: upbeat percussion and boozy horns usher listeners into the speakeasys of the 1920s for the episode on prohibition, while a stately church organ and Middle Eastern music set the tone for a discussion on who’s to blame for the crucifixion of Jesus Christ. But each episode carries at least a bit of the team’s sense of humor.

“I knew I wanted to [make the] sound design a little bit tongue-in-cheek, because I feel there are a lot of really straightforward history podcasts and true crime podcasts that use this robust soundscape in a really sort of sincere way,” she explains. “With The Alarmist, we try to mimic that—but undercut it with some humor.”

Lund has spent most of her career on the talent side of the business, as an actor in TV shows like The New Girl and Brooklyn Nine-Nine. She wrote and created the critically acclaimed audio series The Complete Woman (Earwolf, Earios), where she also began to hone her editing chops. But while that series is a more tightly produced package, working on The Alarmist is a looser affair.

“You can manipulate so much in editing,” she says. “It’s amazing what you can do by taking out a split second of silence or adding a split second of silence. But I don’t do that too much with The Alarmist, just because Rebecca and Chris [Smith, live fact checker] are both improvisers and comedians.”

Conversations are presented more or less the way they occur live. Delgado-Smith prepares for each topic and commits to the arc of the episode, which makes Lund’s job easier.

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“I try not to rearrange because I feel like it’s a house of cards, and the minute you start moving stuff around, you make 100 times more work for yourself,” she says. “I really try to just take out full sections if I [have to edit]. I really don’t have to worry about manipulating the conversation that much.”

The Alarmist is currently recorded remotely, with Delgado-Smith and Lund working over video conference with guests like actress Cass Bugge (bottom).
The Alarmist is currently recorded remotely, with the hosts and Lund working over video conference with guests like actress Cass Bugge (bottom).

Recording remotely hasn’t taken the fun out of producing the comedy podcast. The setup is straightforward, with the show’s host and guests communicating over video conference. Lund runs a Sennheiser E 845-S dynamic cardioid mic into Avid Pro Tools via a Behringer U-Phoria UMC404 interface. Delgado-Smith and Smith use the same mics, with a Tascam DR-70D audio recorder. Guests record locally, typically to QuickTime, and then Lund assembles the episodes. So far, she says she has only had to remove minor background noises in iZotope RX.

“We’ve been pretty lucky,” she says. “You never really know what you’re going to get, and you can’t control it because you don’t know really how it’s going to sound until you get the file. It really is a kind of crapshoot.”

The Alarmisthttps://www.earios.net/the-alarmist

Podcast Studio Makeover Winners Announced

Matthew and Sarah Bivens, hosts of the Doing It at Home podcast
Matthew and Sarah Bivens, hosts of the Doing It at Home podcast

Los Angeles, CA (October 14, 2020)—Focusrite and other audio brands have announced the three competition winners of a podcast studio makeover valued at $2,300 in gear and services.

The winners include Matthew and Sarah Bivens, hosts of the Doing It at Home podcast; Jarika Johnson, host of the Blackpacking podcast; and Melanie Scroggins, host of the Creator Speak Podcast. The winners have received a Focusrite Scarlett 18i8 3rd gen audio interface; their choice of a Heil Sound microphone and boom arm; a set of ADAM Audio SP-5 studio headphones; a Namba Gear Lil Namba Remix backpack; a design session and $500 store credit with Audimute for a custom sound treatment solution; Journalist Pro from Hindenburg; 50% off a SquadCast annual plan; and a discount on podcast hosting from Simplecast.

Intended to remove barriers to creativity for the recipients, each makeover also includes an hour of podcast coaching from Harry Duran, host of Podcast Junkies and founder of FullCast. The winners will also be featured in podcast specific projects with Focusrite over the coming months.

Jarika Johnson, creator of the Blackpacking podcast
Jarika Johnson, creator of the Blackpacking podcast

Matthew and Sarah Bivens, based in Atlanta, GA, created the Doing It at Home podcast as a weekly discussion about home birth and their decision to go from a traditional hospital birth with an OB-GYN to a natural birth at home with midwives. The Bivens’ prize package included a Heil PR 40 microphone for Matthew, a Heil PR 30 for Sarah and two Heil PL2T boom arms and shock mounts, alongside all the other standard prize package fare. Future plans for the duo include sharing more diverse birth stories and growing their community outside of the podcast.

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Jarika Johnson, also based in Atlanta, created the Blackpacking podcast to discuss her personal travel stories and have engaging discussions with guests about all things travel. Johnson chose a Heil PR 40 mic.

Melanie Scroggins, host of the Creator Speak Podcast.
Melanie Scroggins, host of the Creator Speak Podcast.

Melanie Scroggins, based in the Dallas/Fort Worth area, developed The Creator Speak Podcast as a limited series based on conversations with creatives and educators about their experiences in the world and how they use their particular brand of genius. Scroggins’ prize package included a Heil PR 30 microphone.

Focusrite marketing manager Dan Hughley, who helms the Focusrite Pro Podcast, remarks, “We had hundreds of amazing submissions, and I took a strong personal stake in carefully reviewing each entry and helping choose the ones that were right for the selection of winners. Unfortunately, every deserving submission couldn’t end up on the list of recipients, but the three lucky selectees are all amazing podcasters that we are proud to elevate. We can’t wait to see what comes next for all these talented individuals.”

Focusrite: • www.focusrite.com

PreSonus Launches PD-70 Broadcast Mic

PreSonus PD-70 Broadcast Mic

Baton Rouge, LA (October 14, 2020)—PreSonus has launched its new PD-70 Dynamic Broadcast Microphone, intended for podcasters, radio broadcasters, YouTubers and live streaming.

As a dynamic end-address mic with a cardioid polar pattern, the PD-70 offers a 20 Hz to 20 kHz (±3 dB) frequency range. On-board features include an integrated windscreen to reduce plosives, and an integrated hard mount.

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Designed with an aim to reduce mechanical noise and breathiness, the mic is claimed to offer solid off-axis rejection, allowing mic owners to use it as a part of portable recording setups.

The mic is available now at a U.S. street price of $129.95.

PreSonus • www.presonus.com/products/PD-70

Podcast Audio Compression—How and Why with ‘Eric Krasno Plus One’

Eric Krasno, a studio-savvy professional musician, talks shop with artists and producers like Don Was, Dave Matthews and John Mayer on his music podcast.
Eric Krasno, GRAMMY-winning producer/songwriter and member of funk/jazz trio Soulive, talks shop with artists and producers like Don Was, Dave Matthews and John Mayer on his music podcast.

When producer Matt Dwyer sits down to mix and master an episode of the podcast Eric Krasno Plus One (Osiris Media), his ears are searching for the sweet, compressed sounds he heard on the airwaves in the 1980s.

“I grew up in the era of great FM radio,” he says, “so I have in my head these amazing-sounding FM radio voices from the Eighties, really smooth-talking people without much variation [that] come through loud and clear wherever you are.”

Achieving that aesthetic can be a challenge, he says, especially considering the variety of input sources he encounters on the podcast. Krasno, a GRAMMY-winning producer/songwriter who talks shop with artists and producers like Don Was, Dave Matthews and John Mayer on his music podcast, tracks with a Telefunken AK-47 mic and a Universal Audio LA-610 preamp. But his guests’ audio can be a wild card.

“Primarily, we’re doing [interviews] over FaceTime,” says Dwyer, “and then he’ll feed the audio back into Ableton. We’re trying to get guests to record themselves locally and then send the track to us, [but] we try to make do with the remote audio the best we can.”

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Passing the files over the internet adds some initial compression, but Dwyer doubles down to tighten them up before sending the tracks through a limiter and boosting the gain. “It’s a lot different than producing music, because you want a really steady sound from the voice with very, very little dynamics,” he says. “People are listening to these things in their car, in the gym, and you want to serve the conversation rather than focus on an audiophile experience.”

Dwyer has a reliable formula for equalizing the tracks, and there’s a night-and-day difference between how he handles the audio sources. The audio files he gets from Krasno and his guests are often adjusted in opposite directions.

“Eric has a nice, deep voice, so I’m doing a lot of rolling off of the low end, maybe around 200 Hz, to take a little bit off the low end so it’s not so boomy,” he says. “To the contrary, if I’m looking at a FaceTime recording or something like that, I’m probably boosting a little bit more in the mid-range, maybe like the 400-800 Hz range, because you don’t get as much of that coming into those recordings.”

"You want serve the conversation rather than focus on an audiophile experience,” says producer Matt Dwyer.
“You want to serve the conversation rather than focus on an audiophile experience,” says producer Matt Dwyer.

Dwyer doesn’t impose a heavy hand in the mastering stage, he says. His primary concern is to bring out an overall frequency shape if he didn’t get it in the mix, and to work on loudness.

“When you’re talking about podcasts, especially when you’re going to get into a platform that serves up dynamic ads, you’ve got to be very conscious about your loudness measurement. For example, with the platform we’re on, all the ads are served up at -16 LUFS. I try to master for an average of -16 LUFS, and do kind of a QA inspection of the overall file.”

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As a confessed music fanatic, Dwyer can be hyper-critical of albums that come out with “squashed and poor dynamic range,” he says. Podcasts, he recognizes, are a different beast.

“The unfortunate nature of the podcast space,” he says, “is that the end result is going to be a 128 Kb MP3 that people are going to get served up. You have to keep that in mind, particularly in the mastering stage, and make sure that it’s going to sound varied to somebody streaming it to their phone coming through their earbuds. It’s a lot about problematic frequencies and making sure that the loudness is intact and where we want it to be.”

Eric Krasno Plus Onehttps://www.osirispod.com/podcasts/eric-krasno-plus-one

AES Show 2020 Set Broadcast / Online Track

AES Show 2020New York, NY (October 6, 2020)—The AES Show 2020 Convention’s Broadcast and Online Delivery Track will examine key technologies and applications while taking a look back at broadcast history and a look forward to the opportunities that lie ahead.

The session “Practical Tips for Using Digital Audio in a 2110 Facility” will offer in-depth expertise on IP architecture and the SMPTE ST 2110 media networking protocol, of which the Audio Engineering Society’s AES3 and AES67 standards are key components, as well as related technologies and workflows. In this featured Broadcast and Online Delivery Track event, moderator Andy Butler (PBS) will host Wesley D. Simpson (Telecom Product Consulting), Robert Welch (technical solutions lead, Arista Networks) and Peter Wharton (principal consultant, Happy Robotz, Inc.) to share their tips for media networking success and respond to your toughest questions in the follow-up Q&A.

Track sessions of historical importance include “Pass the Mic,” which will celebrate this year’s 100th anniversary of radio broadcasting and its innovations with host John Holt. In “A Century of Radio: What You May Not Know About the History of Broadcasting,” presenters Donna Halper (associate professor of communication and media studies at Lesley University, Cambridge MA) and Barry Mishkind (editor/publisher of the Broadcasters’ Desktop Resource) will share surprising facts about broadcast history and dispel some of the myths perpetuated throughout the industry.

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Microphone hygiene and podcast production are timely topics to be closely examined in the presentations: “Stay Safe: Disinfecting Microphones in the time of Covid-19” with presenter David Prentice and “Podcasts: Telling Stories with Sound” with Rob Byers of American Public Media. Byers will host a panel including designer/composers Jim Briggs and Fernando Arruda from Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting, as well as podcast series reporter/producers Laura Starecheski and Ike Sriskandarajah.

In addition, two compelling virtual tours will be conducted in the sessions “A Virtual Tour and Discussion: BBC Broadcasting House Studio” led by Jamie Laundon and “A Virtual Tour and Discussion: BBC Wales – Cardiff Central Square IP-based Broadcast Facility” with Adrian Wisbey.

“Even though we are celebrating the 100th anniversary of broadcasting, everything is new,” states AES Show Broadcast and Online Delivery Track chair David Bialik, now in his 36th year of curating the Convention’s Broadcast Track and events. “The pandemic has added new parameters to getting broadcasts out.

“With all information out there on the ST-2110 media networking standard being adopted by broadcasters, I find it amazing that there’s so much for so many to learn. The AES Show 2020 Broadcast and Online Delivery Track will explore today’s critical issues, visit showcase facilities and recall the history of how we got to where we are through a deep and diverse list of sessions that promise to educate and fascinate.”

AES Show • www.aesshow.com

Mackie Debuts New EleMent Mics

Mackie EleMent Mics
The new mics in the Mackie EleMent line are (l-r): Chromium USB condenser; EM-91CU USB condenser; and Carbon USB condenser.

Bothell, WA (October 5, 2020)—While Mackie first launched its EleMent Series of microphones in January this year, the manufacturer is now expanding the line with five new additions—three new mics, a boom and pop screen. Additionally, the company’s MC-100 headphones, originally only available as part of bundles, are being spun out as a stand-alone product. All of the products are aimed at content creation such as podcasting, as well as recording and remote meeting use.

Key to the new offerings are three new microphones—the EM-91CU USB condenser microphone, Carbon USB condenser microphone, and Chromium USB condenser microphone.

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The plug-and-play EM-91CU USB condenser microphone ($49) sports a cardioid polar pattern, includes a USB cable and shock mount, and has a sample rate of 16-bit/48 kHz. Meanwhile, the Carbon USB mic ($149) features Mackie’s Onyx mic preamp circuitry and five selectable polar patterns—stereo, cardioid, bi-directional, super cardioid and omni. It, too, offers a sample rate of 16-bit/48 kHz and comes with a mic stand and USB-C cable.

As the line’s flagship, the Chromium USB condenser microphone ($199) features a built-in 2-channel mixer with instrument and stereo 1/8” inputs, as well as four polar patterns—stereo, cardioid, bi-directional and omni. Equipped with a built-in mixer stand, USB-C cable and a sample rate of 16-bit/48 kHz, the Chromium is intended for recording music, podcasts, live streams and online content creation.

Accessorizing the new microphones, the DB-100 Desktop Microphone Boom Arm ($79) and PF-100 Pop Screen for EleMent Series mics ($14) are also now available. The MC-100 professional closed-back headphones are $29.99.

Mackie • www.mackie.com

‘Working Class Audio’ Podcast Tackles Realities of Recording Life

For more than 300 episodes, Matt Boudreau has explored the recording life with his Working Class Audio podcast.
For more than 300 episodes, Matt Boudreau (seen here at Jackpot Studios) has explored the recording life with his Working Class Audio podcast.

San Francisco, CA (October 1, 2020)—If audio pros listening to the Working Class Audio podcast take away one thing, Matt Boudreau hopes it’s the lesson of diversification. As every studio hound learns, all it takes to lose your recording is a single point of failure. Running a studio business, he says, works the same way.

Working Class Audio Logo“One thing I preach about endlessly on my show is diversification of income and creating income streams, making it so there’s not a single point of failure,” says Boudreau. “This pandemic has really highlighted the strength of that concept.”

As the podcast’s creator, host and producer, Boudreau knows what he’s talking about. When he was a recording studio owner in San Francisco in the 2000s, he had a hard time navigating the Great Recession—and once the financial tension spread from work to his home life, he knew he had to make some changes. He also knew he wasn’t the only one in that situation.

“I didn’t have a strong financial sense about me,” says Boudreau. “I thought, ‘I have to completely rethink this approach. I want to do audio, but I don’t want to fail financially. I’ve got to come up with more of a ‘working class audio’ way of doing things.’” That meant shutting down his studio and rebuilding his career through freelance audio work. And then it meant starting a podcast.

Boudreau established the Working Class Audio podcast to share his experiences, as well as provide a forum for other audio pros to share their stories—how they’re surviving, how they deal with money and how they create work-life balance while continuing to work in audio at the level they want. “Everybody’s story is very different,” he says, “and everybody’s situation is vastly different. Some people have been far more successful. Jacquire King’s story is going to be vastly different from Michael Rosen’s story, or Steve Albini’s.”

Boudreau's home-based mixing and mastering studio.
Boudreau’s home-based mixing and mastering studio.

After more than 300 episodes, Boudreau still produces the Working Class Audio podcast from the Bay Area home-based mixing and mastering studio where he does much of his work these days. He typically conducts his interviews over Zoom while recording locally to a Sound Devices MixPre-6 through either an AEA KU5A hyper-cardioid ribbon mic or an Audio-Technica BP40 dynamic mic.

One benefit of interviewing studio engineers and producers is not having to worry about getting bad audio from them when he syncs. That wasn’t always the case, though. “The early episodes don’t sound that good, but the later episodes do,” he confesses, noting that those initial segments were recorded over Skype. “It took me a while to figure out, ‘Oh yeah, I could just have them record themselves.’ And it worked. Now the quality of the show is closer to that NPR goal.”

The podcast can take Boudreau on the road, such as when he interviewed Grammy Nominated Mastering engineer Kim Rosen at The NAMM Show in January, 2020.
The podcast occasionally takes Boudreau on the road, such as when he interviewed Grammy-nominated mastering engineer Kim Rosen at The NAMM Show in January, 2020.

In his transition to freelance work, precision and speed became more important than ever, and Working Class Audio puts those principles into action. Turnaround on an episode is typically one week from recording to publishing. He and editor Anne-Marie Pleau send Pro Tools session files back and forth, running them through iZotope RX to reduce accidental noises and even subtle annoyances like the whoosh of a computer fan.

Once the podcast goes out to the world, what comes back to him are often tales of listeners’ own experiences. The goal, though, is for others to not have to learn the hard way.

“I have learned so much from guests over the years,” he says. “But when listeners send me an email and say, ‘Hey man, I drive a van for a living and I’m getting into a studio situation, and I followed the advice that this guest gave, and this guest gave, and you gave, and I’m really doing well’—that’s when I think, okay, this is serious. This is providing something of value to people.

“As those messages come in, I think my focus is shifting. It’s not so much about what I want to learn, but about what I want others to be able to get out of it.”

Working Class Audio podcast • https://solo.to/wca

Matt Boudreau • www.mattboudreau.com

IsoVox Debuts IsoMic Voice-Over Microphone

IsoVox IsoMic Voice-Over Microphone
IsoVox IsoMic Voice-Over Microphone

Halmstad, Sweden (September 29, 2020)—Swedish audio manufacturer IsoVox has introduced IsoMic, a new voice-over microphone created in conjunction with fellow Swedish company Research Electronics AB, owners of the Ehrlund Microphones brand.

The new microphone is said to be optimized for recording within the company’s IsoVox 2 vocal booth and is based around a triangular capsule with a 7 Hz to 87 kHz frequency range. During the developmental process, the IsoVox team turned to Ehrlund Microphones in order to use the triangular technology developed by Göran Ehrlund; the triangular capsule features a membrane with a recovery movement that is said to be three times faster than a circular one, aiding its ability to pick up transients.

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The IsoMic itself features an aluminum body with glass bead-blasting finish. Its triangular capsule reportedly has a SNR (Signal-to-Noise Ratio) of 87 dBA, DR (Dynamic Range) of 115 dB, and a maximum SPL (Sound Pressure Level) peak performance of 0.5% THD (Total Harmonic Distortion) at 116 dB or 1% THD at 122 dB. The IsoMic also has a low equivalent noise level of <7 dB (A).

The IsoMic conveniently comes complete with an IsoPop, working with its integrated filter to act as a double pop-removal zone, alongside other original accessories. The microphone will be available in the U.S. in mid-October, 2020 with a MAP of $1,299.

IsoVox • www.isovoxbooth.com

Zoom Launches PodTrak P8 Podcast Studio

Zoom has introduced its flagship podcast-oriented production tool with the PodTrak P8.
Zoom has introduced its flagship podcast-oriented production tool with the PodTrak P8.

New York, NY (September 28, 2020)—Zoom has introduced its flagship podcast production tool with the PodTrak P8, aiming to provide a complete podcast studio with recording, editing and mixing capabilities all in one unit.

Up to six mics can be used at the same time, each with its own fader and preamp with 70 dB of gain. A seventh channel is devoted solely to recording calls via smartphones, while the sixth channel, can be switched to USB for recording guests from a computer. Both the sixth and seventh channels include a Mix-Minus feature. Along with the six inputs are six independent headphone outputs as well, along with main outputs that users can connect to their own studio speakers for monitoring.

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Central to the P8 is a color touchscreen that can be used for monitoring, adjusting, onboard editing and more. Features include limiters, low cut, tone adjustments, a compressor/de-esser, noise reduction and more. Clips can be edited, trimmed, split, faded and more on the screen, or files can be transferred to a computer for mixing as well.

Adjacent to it is a series of nine multi-colored sound pads that can be used to trigger sound effects, music, pre-recorded interviews and more. The PodTrak P8 comes with 13 onboard sound pre-loaded, and users can upload their own, with the ability to create up to four banks of sounds for 36 sound clips in all.

Small enough to be portable, the PodTrak P8 provides up to two hours of recording with four AA batteries or can be powered via USB. Additionally, the unit can function solely as an audio interface when connected to a computer for recording and live streaming. The unit comes packaged with the main unit, an AD-14 AC adapter, and a quick guide for getting started.

Zoom • https://zoomcorp.com

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