Versions:

  • 0.0.2
  • 0.0.1

VoxArchive is a lightweight audio-recording utility developed by Ovis that lets Windows users capture incoming and outgoing sound on two discrete channels during the same session, making it simple to keep microphone commentary separate from system or VoIP audio. Because the program writes each source to its own file, podcasters can later balance levels, apply noise reduction, or re-mix tracks without the bleed-through that single-channel recordings often introduce; gamers can isolate voice chat for highlight reels while preserving in-game effects; and remote-meeting participants can generate clean transcripts or compliance logs by feeding the split recordings into speech-to-text engines. The tool runs unobtrusively in the background, listens to the default Windows input and output devices, and stores synchronized WAV files in a time-stamped folder structure, so editors can line up channels frame-accurately in any DAW. Category placement is Multimedia / Audio / Recorders, and the current public build is version 0.0.2, representing the second incremental release since the project’s debut. Despite its early-stage numbering, the codebase already exposes configurable sample rates, 16- or 24-bit depth options, and automatic gain control, while keeping CPU overhead low enough for simultaneous game capture or streaming. Users who need repeatable setups can launch VoxArchive from scripts or assign hotkeys, and session metadata is written to sidecar JSON files for downstream automation. The software is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads provided via trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always delivering the latest version and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.

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