
The company announced the feature in a tweet on Sunday, offering a quick demo and
In the above example, individual speakers duringClubhouse callers can be heard as if their voices are in different locations in 3D space around the listener. This makes it seem like everyone is in a different place in the same room. Clubhouse explained that users will not hear spatial audio when they are “on stage,” but only “in the audience.”
Hear ye, hear ye spAAaAaAatial audio on Clubhouse!
It’s like surround sound, but w/ your own headphones. A more vibrant, human experience! Plus makes it much easier to tell who's talking.
thanks to @juberti for this one rolling out now on iOS, Android coming soon! pic.twitter.com/Zit6F9ijRK
- Clubhouse (@Clubhouse) August 29, 2021
In addition, support is promised to appear soonAndroid. However, what is “fast Android support” in the Clubhouse style, everyone remembers the long-suffering launch of an application for this platform.
To be clear, this is not a versionspatial audio from Apple, which includes head tracking to make sound appear to be coming from your iPhone or iPad. However, the arrival of analogue demonstrates how popular spatial audio has become since Apple began promoting the concept.
Implemented in AirPods Pro or Max and basedon Dolby Atmos, Apple's system uses the gyroscope and accelerometer in the headphones and iOS device to track your head movement and the device's position, then compares the motion data and rearranges the sound field so it stays locked to your device even as your head moves.
Source: Clubhouse
Illustrations: Alexander Shatov
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