Hi,
thanks for all your answers and sharing your experiences. That's very valuable.
Now I know the english speaking users don't experience this.
I wished it was so simple. But unfortunately it's not connected to Ducking. I
know the ducking function and I think it's a good idea of Apples. The is
Hi,
It sounds like Audio Ducking is enabled. What Audio Ducking does is lower the
volume of VO when certain things are happening so that whatever the OS thinks
is priority can be heard. I prefer that VO is my priority so I've turned Audio
Ducking off. You do this in the Sound (cmd-6) pane of
i suspect about the audio docking, you have to uncheck it on the voice over
utility > sounds
On 27 Apr 2014, at 03:33 pm, Jürgen Fleger wrote:
> Hi,
>
> last year I bought a new MacBook Air mid 2013. Ever since I have a loudness
> issue with VO. It happens that VO sways in the loudness up and
Hi there
That's interesting. I've never had that happen. My MacBook Pro is a 2011 Mac
Book Pro and I wonder if that makes any difference.
Gigi
Sent from my iPhone
> On Apr 27, 2014, at 8:33 AM, Jürgen Fleger wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> last year I bought a new MacBook Air mid 2013. Ever since I have a
I am using an English voice on my Mac, and so I have no such issues.
> On 27 Apr 2014, at 02:33 pm, Jürgen Fleger wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> last year I bought a new MacBook Air mid 2013. Ever since I have a loudness
> issue with VO. It happens that VO sways in the loudness up and down.
> Sometimes
Hi,
last year I bought a new MacBook Air mid 2013. Ever since I have a loudness
issue with VO. It happens that VO sways in the loudness up and down. Sometimes
it's fine for a while but then again it sways up and down. At first I suspected
my computer. But then I heard this loudness swaying on o