Ovis is a boutique Japanese audio-software house that channels its entire development focus into a single, highly specialized mission: giving Windows users surgical control over every sound that enters or leaves their machine. The publisher’s lone flagship, VoxArchive, behaves like a digital mixing console grafted onto the operating system, intercepting inbound and outbound audio streams before they reach the speakers or microphone and writing each to its own timestamped, lossless track. Podcasters use it to isolate remote interviewees from local voice-overs, customer-service centers turn it into a lightweight compliance recorder that keeps agent and caller on separate channels for later QA, and gamers live-streaming to Niconico or YouTube capture team chat and game effects without the muddy crosstalk that ruins post-production mixes. Because the utility sits at the driver level, it records VoIP calls from Teams, Zoom, Discord, or Steam without requesting microphone exclusivity, and it writes directly to FLAC or WAV so editors can drop files straight into Audition or DaVinci Resolve with no re-encoding. Loopback devices, configurable sample rates, and automatic naming conventions make it equally suited for hour-long conference backups or month-long observational studies. Ovis software is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always pull the latest release, and can be queued for batch installation alongside any other applications.

VoxArchive

音声の入出力を別チャンネルで分離録音・保存するレコーディングツール

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