Indeed. You will find there are 5 plugins - declipper, declicker, denoiser, spectral repair and hum removal
The installer will provide the option (if you are on 64bit OS) to install 64bit versions of the plugs - so if you have such apps - you get to enjoy the nativiity.[an iZotope speciality..lol]
Spectral repair can be a little quirky to use - but you'll know how to use it straight away as it will detect Vegas and tell you how to use the plugs. Instructions also specific for other apps, such as Nuendo, Cubase etc.
This is sweet! I've been using RX stand alone but to have it right there in Vegas just ups the productivity by 100%. Way cool. You would think this would be in their newsletter. Great spotting Grazie.
Mutts . . I wasn't emailed nor notified. I just got a "nudge" about NAB, saw Izo being close to SONY, and thought: "Hey, let's see what's 'appening over there on the Izo site?" - And thar she be!
"IzoRx" this is the PAID for, "iZotope's new complete audio restoration software combining the highest resolution displays with the highest quality denoising, hum removal, declicking, declipping, and spectral tools"
IzoRx is what Sound Forge's noise reduction module would be today, if Sony had continued to enhance it. If you need to do any of the things that Grazie listed, you MUST get this product. It is amazing, almost mystical. I still cannot believe it when I remove a cough from a recording and, in most cases, the wanted sound seems totally unaffected. Absolute magic.
Agreed. This is a must have tool. I removed someone dropping a chair in the middle of a memorial service. The chair made a big bang but after using IzoRx the bang is gone. I wouldn't have believed it could be done but you just paint the sound out visually. It's absolutely brilliant. I love it.
Sometimes it takes some fiddling to find the right combination of settings to not get newly created discordant sounds, I miss the Vegas PLAY and PAUSE buttons, with stereo files the screen gets a bit cramped, I wish it would graphically show what the surrounding areas are sort of like SF9 and I'd buy a Wacom tablet in a flash if I could draw those darn little lines the way I want them.
That said a couple of weeks ago I finished a 2 CD set of live recordings and RX did a superb job of removing babies, thumping mic stands, a stuck damper on a piano string, room rumble, and even the 15734 from a near by monitor. I really love it - mostly.
I'd rate RX 85% brilliant and 15% frustrating. I agree with what you are saying, namely that the interface is clunky, and the controls for moving through the sound file are close to being downright bad. I did speak to one of their engineers when I first purchased the product, but was still so in awe that I didn't get into the negatives. I did subsequently write to them and suggested that they "steal" a few UI ideas from Sound Forge. While Sound Forge has fallen behind in terms of features, it's UI -- like the user interface in Vegas -- is still a really fine piece of work.