
Similarly, if you are recording a piece of loud music, you should consider lowering the volume.
If you are speaking softly, you should increase the volume so that your Mac can recognize your voice clearly. This option will only be available if you have a 4 channel built-in microphone format supported device. you can also use the ‘Use Ambient Noise Reduction’ option. You can adjust the Input volume if you are recording from your computer’s sound port. You can adjust the input volume by dragging the volume slider. To adjust your Sound Input settings, you can do any of the following:. In case your display has an internal microphone, it will be listed as ‘Display Audio’. You will be given a list of Input devices for Sound. Select System Preferences and click Sound, and then click on Input. Go to your Mac and chose the Apple menu icon. I’d email the developers and ask them which is better for your needs. I have an older license for their Airfoil app, which was excellent - and it might actually be more in-line with your needs, since it specifically deals with routing wireless audio.
I think I demoed SoundSource in the past, but I do not have a license myself. If I understand SoundSource properly, you’ll never have to switch audio output again, thus superseding your original request.
They seem to be macOS audio experts, their other apps all do other highly configurable things and maybe another is more appropriate.īut I think SoundSource will do what you ultimately want to achieve, which is have Slack use the internal speakers as the audio output, and keep the AirPlay speakers for Spotify. All simultaneously.Īnd you can likely just email the developers of SoundSource to make sure it does what I am suggesting. So Spotify can be routed to AirPlay, system sounds to the headphones, and Slack to the internal speaker. Yeah that’s the idea of that app, you can route the audio output of individual apps to their own output source.