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High Tech Home Studio with Marc Haycook – TWiRT Ep. 700

High Tech Home Studio with Marc Haycook – TWiRT Ep. 700

#High #Tech #Home #Studio #Marc #Haycook #TWiRT

“TWiRT – This Week in Radio Tech”

Marc Haycook is a problem solver! He needed to add a VO studio to his home, but new construction or expansion isn’t allowed there. He needed a studio that could be moved around for access and maintenance, but not on wheels. He needed access to phones, Internet, electricity, but had to keep…

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3 Comments

  1. Kirk, like you I have/had a speech issue so I started a YouTube channel to force myself to work on it. I figured doing live streams all by myself would force me to speak better and it has worked.

  2. You’ve no doubt heard about the new trend to construct Tiny Homes. But, have you heard about the construction of sound-isolated Tiny Studios?

    In landmark Episode 700 of the TWiRT Podcast, Marc Haycock explains in detail the construction of his “furniture box” Tiny Studio. Broadcast engineers will enjoy this entertaining and instructive Episode.

  3. WRT “Mitel” it was founded as mike and terrys electric lawnmowers. They never got to sell them allegedly so they made the Superswitches, SX50/100/200/2000 digital switches the 3300 IP based systems.

    The brand is so broad because they bought Aastra (formerly Nortel’s analog sets), Shoretel (the orange colored boxes), Toshiba’s Strata line ( just for support customers) and just recently the “Unify” brand that included Siemens and ol ROLM assets. They inched to buy Polycom but didn’t and married with Plantronics instead Oh and they bought Intertel at some point too. They’re the only on prem company left behind Cisco because CNN and CNBC is keeping Avaya alive (I only know two other companies in my area that using Avaya) and they ruined Nortel enterprise customers flocking to half baked Poly/cloud or Cisco’s Unicom offerings.

    The remark by Kirk with Asterisk is a passive statement and not fully true. Asterisk runs on any Unix or Linux systems and acts as a fancy daemon functioning as a strict PBX. Asterisk is not used by any big name company but their code could run on Linux. I use asterisk professionally but I do not like it personally. Polycom was great for analog conference phones… everything past 2005 stained their reputation.

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