CCleaner 歷史版本列表
CCleaner 是 Windows PC 的免費軟件系統優化,隱私和清潔工具。它從您的系統中刪除未使用的文件,允許 Windows 運行更快,釋放寶貴的硬盤空間。它也清除你的網上活動的痕跡,如你的互聯網歷史。另外它包含一個全功能的註冊表清潔。 CCleaner,清理臨時文件,優化& 使用世界領先的 PC 清潔器加速您的計算機。您可以從我們的網站點擊免費下載按鈕下載 CCleaner PC... CCleaner 軟體介紹更新時間:2022-10-13
更新細節:
What's new in this version:
New:
- Option added to show containing address book for a contact when using All Address Books in vertical mode
Changed:
- Thunderbird will try to use POP NTLM authentication even if not advertised by server
- Task List and Today Pane sidebars will no longer load when not visible
Fixed:
- Sending a message while a recipient pill was being modified did not save changes
- Nickname column was not available in horizontal view of Address Book
- Multiline organization values were displayed across two columns in horizontal view of Address Book
- Contact vCard fields with multiple values such as Categories were truncated when saved
- ICS calendar files with a FREEBUSY property could not be imported
- Thunderbird would hang if calendar event exceeded the year 2035
更新時間:2022-10-11
更新細節:
What's new in this version:
New Spectral devices, for all Bitwig Studio customers:
- Spectral Suite, four new audio FX and a package of sound content, is now part of Bitwig Studio
- There is a new Spectral device category, where the four new audio FX can be found
- How do these "spectral" devices work?…
- These audio FX are frequency-domain devices, which separate the incoming sound into hundreds of pieces for analysis
- In the frequency domain, each moment of a sound isn't simply loud or quiet (for example); there are always frequencies that are loud and those that are quiet
- So Bitwig does the math and then, based on the device's orientation, related signals are grouped into "channels" for easy mixing and plug-in-friendly control
- These devices are "containers" at heart, reconstructing the original sound… until you move one of the channel controls (Gain or Panning) or insert a plug-in
- The sooner you adjust an audio parameter, the more obvious the devices become
- All four devices have an identical structure for each channel:
- Gain control, in standard volume range
- Panning control, for stereo placement
- An On (or "active") switch, shown with a speaker icon beneath the Gain knob, in case you want to disable a channel
- A Solo control, shown as an S button to the left of the Gain knob, for auditioning one channel at a time
- A device chain, for processing this channel of audio with any Bitwig device or VST/CLAP plug-in
- Like all nested device chains on these devices, notes reaching the device are available here, for envelope triggers, phase resets, or anything else you deem appropriate
- All four devices also share an identical Output Section:
- A Pre FX chain, for processing incoming audio before it goes to the spectral analysis, perhaps for a Compressor or Dynamics to tighten the signal, or anything else
- A Post FX chain, for processing the sum of the audio channels, maybe for an EQ+ to balance the full output, or your favorite plug-in, or…
- A Mix control, that blends the dry incoming signal with the final processed signal (coming from the channels and Post FX chain)
- Freq Split, Loud Split, and Harmonic Split all use similar visualizations and share a Spectrum Display Inspector parameter, with two modes:
- Pre shows the analysis data (and no audio processing from the channel controls, such as Gain or audio plug-ins), good for tweaking the splits
- Post shows each channel's output audio, post-processing
New Spectral Suite device: Freq Split (Spectral):
- Divides signal into frequency groups and sorts them into one of four channels, for individual mixing and processing
- Frequency Splits sets the number of splits across the frequency spectrum, which works with two nearby parameters:
- Split Insertion Direction sets whether additional splits are added from the right/high edge of the spectrum (←), from the left/low edge of the spectrum (→), or around the relative middle (↔︎)
- Crossfade Amount determines the overlap between splits
- So with the device's default settings, 16 Splits with an Insertion Direction putting new splits on the right (←) means:
- The 1st, 5th, 9th, and 13th splits land in channel 1 (red)
- The 2nd, 6th, 10th, and 14th splits land in channel 2 (blue)
- The 3rd, 7th, 11th, and 15th splits land in channel 3 (yellow)
- The 4th, 8th, 12th, and 16th splits land in channel 4 (magenta)
- And if the Crossfade Amount was increased from 0.00 % (full isolation between bands) to 50.0 %, then each split would spend its first 25 % crossfading with the previous split, and its last quarter crossfading with the next split
- Split Nudge slides the frequency splits by an offset value, so a setting of +2.00 pushes the contents of channel 1 into channel 2, channel 4 into channel 2, and so on
- Split Spin also slides the frequency splits but relative to the entire spectrum; so a setting of -10.0 % slides all the splits a tenth lower in the entire spectrum
- Whether being subtle (Split Nudge) or extreme (Split Spin), modulating either of these parameters shows the "filter bank" quality of this device, creating new phasers and more when each channel is loaded with different audio FX
- Split Bend curves the frequency split pattern around a new midpoint, either moving the midpoint downward and putting splits closer together in the lower frequencies (negative values) or moving the midpoint higher and having splits closer together in the upper frequencies (positive values)
- Split Pinch kinks the frequency split pattern, either bunching more splits around the midpoint (positive values) or putting more splits into the sides (negative values)
- In the device's display, the interactive white dot controls Split Bend when dragged left to right, and Split Pinch when dragged up and down; it's fun
- The Spectral Limiter option sets a maximum Threshold level for each individual frequency bin
- In the device's display, the Threshold is shown with a horizontal orange bar that can be dragged up or down
New Spectral Suite device: Harmonic Split (Spectral):
- Tracks the fundamental frequency of the incoming sound, for splitting Nonharmonics (gray) to one channel and dividing harmonics between Harmonics A (orange) and Harmonics B (turquoise) channels, for individual mixing and processing
- Harmonics Pattern decides how harmonics are distributed between the A and B channels
- The default setting of 2 places every 2nd harmonic in A channel, so the A channel will be odd harmonics (1st, 3rd, 5th, etc.), and the B channel receives all even harmonics (2nd, 4th, 6th, etc.)
- A setting of 4, for example, would place the 1st, 5th, 9th, etc. harmonics in channel A, and all other harmonics (2nd, 3rd, 4th; 6th, 7th…) into channel B
- Higher values lead to narrower results in the A channel — and the potential for more extreme processing without "getting into trouble"
- A setting of 1 is special, routing only the fundamental to channel A and all other harmonics to channel B
- Nonharmonic Sensitivity is a relative control for how picky the harmonic vs. non-harmonic split is, where a higher Sensitivity value allows less audio into the Nonharmonic channel — and more audio into the two Harmonics channels
- The Maximum Harmonics Inspector parameter allows you to limit the number of harmonics being tracked, acting as a "ceiling" when you want fewer frequencies in the Harmonics A and B channels
- Fundamental tracking can be adjusted with several analysis parameters:
- Tilt favors the high frequencies (when positive) or low frequencies (when negative), useful when the desired fundamental is filtered in the sound, etc.
- The Low-cut Frequency and High-cut Frequency parameters narrow the frequency tracking area
- An amplitude Detection Threshold can be set, keeping moments that stay below that level in the Nonharmonics channel
- In the device's display, the Detection Threshold and Cut Frequencies are interactive lines that can be dragged
- The device display also illustrates the currently-detected fundamental with a white dot and moving crosshairs
New Spectral Suite device: Loud Split (Spectral):
- Uses two thresholds to separate the Quiet (green), Mid (yellow), and Loud (red) portions of the incoming sound, for individual mixing and processing
- A Higher Threshold (red) sets the level where stronger signals are considered Loud
- A Lower Threshold (green) sets the level where weaker signals are considered Quiet
- In the device's display, both thresholds are visualized as horizontal lines, which can be dragged up and down
- When clicking a line's dot handle on the right, only the outer band of that threshold will be heard while the mouse is held
- Any signal falling between the two thresholds is considered Mid
- Relative Loudness Mode follows the level of the incoming sound, treating 0.0 dB as the strongest band at any given moment
- Relative Loudness Mode uses separate Relative Higher Threshold and Relative Lower Threshold parameters
- Each threshold has its own Knee value, for setting the transition (and effective crossfade) between adjacent channels
- In the device's display, ALT-dragging on either threshold adjusts its Knee parameter
- Rise Time sets the number of blocks before a softer signal fully transitions up into a louder band, like a "resistance" parameter
- Fall Time sets the number of blocks before a louder signal fully falls down into a quieter band, like a "decay" parameter
- Tilt is an analysis parameter, favoring the high frequencies (when positive) or low frequencies (when negative) before the channel splitting is applied
New Spectral Suite device: Transient Split (Spectral):
- Separates the Transients (short, unstable sounds; colored yellow) and Tones (periodic or pitched sounds; colored blue), for individual mixing and processing
- Analysis Bias either skews the detection to favor Transients (positive values) or Tones (negative values)
- The Transient Type Inspector parameter switches between two different algorithms for which type of Transient is being looked for:
- Percussive searches for typical impact transients, good for drums or other things that "click" and "smack"
- Noise looks for noisy smears, or even reverb residue
- Transients Decay sets a time (in blocks) for extending detected Transients, allowing them to release
- Tones Smoothing sets a time (in blocks) for extending detected Tones, allowing them to decay
- Tilt Amount is an analysis parameter that is colored yellow as it is oriented to how it affects the Transients channel; its effect is the opposite for the Tones channel
- The Tilt Mode Inspector parameter changes the method of Tilt applied, between a Standard model that favors the Transient channel's high frequencies (when positive) or its low frequencies (when negative), or a Contour approach that subtly adjusts the mid frequencies vs. the highs & lows
- Transient/Tones Blend is the audio balance at the output of the spectral section, before each signal reaches its channel
- The Display Style of this device is unique, with two modes:
- Waveform shows a split amplitude domain representation of the two groups
- Sonogram offers the recent frequency-domain history for each group
New Features:
- There is now a Japanese translation of the Bitwig Studio v4.3.0 manual
- Device context menus have be reorganized so that device-specific entries come near the top of the list (for example, the Spectrum Displays setting for three of the Spectral devices)
更新時間:2022-10-08
更新細節:
更新時間:2022-10-08
更新細節:
What's new in this version:
Fixed:
- Sound package update dialog is now only shown for licensed content
- Splice activation did not work correctly or could cause crashes
- Starting a trial phase was showing an error or could lead to a crash
更新時間:2022-10-07
更新細節:
更新時間:2022-10-07
更新細節:
What's new in this version:
Changed:
- Thunderbird will try to use POP CRAM-MD5 authentication even if not advertised by server
Fixed:
- Checking messages on POP3 accounts caused POP folder to lock if mail server was slow or non-responsive
- Newsgroups named with consecutive dots would not appear when refreshing list of newsgroups
- Sending news articles containing lines starting with dot were sometimes clipped
- CardDAV server sync silently failed if sync token expired
- Contacts from LDAP on macOS address books were not displayed
- Chat account input now accepts URIs for supported chat protocols
- Chat ScreenName field was not migrated to new address book
- Creating a New Event from the Today Pane used the currently selected day from the main calendar instead of from the Today Pane
- New Event button in Today Pane was incorrectly disabled sometimes
- Event reminder windows did not close after being dismissed or snoozed
- Improved performance of recurring event date calculation
- Quarterly calendar events on the last day of the month repeated one month early
- Thunderbird would hang if calendar event exceeded the year 2035
- Whitespace in calendar events was incorrectly handled when upgrading from Thunderbird 91 to 102
- Various visual and UX improvements
更新時間:2022-10-05
更新細節:
更新時間:2022-10-05
更新細節:
What's new in this version:
New Add-on Package: Spectral Suite:
- Spectral Suite, four new audio FX and a package of sound content, is now available for purchase
- The devices can be tried via demo mode; open this example project to see them in action
- How do these "spectral" devices work?…
- These audio FX are frequency-domain devices, which separate the incoming sound into hundreds of pieces for analysis
- In the frequency domain, each moment of a sound isn't simply loud or quiet (for example); there are always frequencies that are loud and those that are quiet
- So Bitwig does the math and then, based on the device's orientation, related signals are grouped into "channels" for easy mixing and plug-in-friendly control
- These devices are "containers" at heart, reconstructing the original sound… until you move one of the channel controls (Gain or Panning) or insert a plug-in
- The sooner you adjust an audio parameter, the more obvious the devices become
- All four devices have an identical structure for each channel:
- Gain control, in standard volume range
- Panning control, for stereo placement
- An On (or "active") switch, shown with a speaker icon beneath the Gain knob, in case you want to disable a channel
- A Solo control, shown as an S button to the left of the Gain knob, for auditioning one channel at a time
- A device chain, for processing this channel of audio with any Bitwig device or VST/CLAP plug-in
- Like all nested device chains on these devices, notes reaching the device are available here, for envelope triggers, phase resets, or anything else you deem appropriate
- All four devices also share an identical Output Section:
- A Pre FX chain, for processing incoming audio before it goes to the spectral analysis, perhaps for a Compressor or Dynamics to tighten the signal, or anything else
- A Post FX chain, for processing the sum of the audio channels, maybe for an EQ+ to balance the full output, or your favorite plug-in, or…
- A Mix control, that blends the dry incoming signal with the final processed signal (coming from the channels and Post FX chain)
- Freq Split, Loud Split, and Harmonic Split all use similar visualizations and share a Spectrum Display Inspector parameter, with two modes:
- Pre shows the analysis data (and no audio processing from the channel controls, such as Gain or audio plug-ins), good for tweaking the splits
- Post shows each channel's output audio, post-processing
- New Spectral Suite device: Freq Split (Spectral):
- Divides signal into frequency groups and sorts them into one of four channels, for individual mixing and processing
- Frequency Splits sets the number of splits across the frequency spectrum, which works with two nearby parameters:
- Split Insertion Direction sets whether additional splits are added from the right/high edge of the spectrum (←), from the left/low edge of the spectrum (→), or around the relative middle (↔︎)
- Crossfade Amount determines the overlap between splits
- So with the device's default settings, 16 Splits with an Insertion Direction putting new splits on the right (←) means:
- The 1st, 5th, 9th, and 13th splits land in channel 1 (red)
- The 2nd, 6th, 10th, and 14th splits land in channel 2 (blue)
- The 3rd, 7th, 11th, and 15th splits land in channel 3 (yellow)
- The 4th, 8th, 12th, and 16th splits land in channel 4 (magenta)
- And if the Crossfade Amount was increased from 0.00 % (full isolation between bands) to 50.0 %, then each split would spend its first 25 % crossfading with the previous split, and its last quarter crossfading with the next split
- Split Nudge slides the frequency splits by an offset value, so a setting of +2.00 pushes the contents of channel 1 into channel 2, channel 4 into channel 2, and so on
- Split Spin also slides the frequency splits but relative to the entire spectrum; so a setting of -10.0 % slides all the splits a tenth lower in the entire spectrum
- Whether being subtle (Split Nudge) or extreme (Split Spin), modulating either of these parameters shows the "filter bank" quality of this device, creating new phasers and more when each channel is loaded with different audio FX
- Split Bend curves the frequency split pattern around a new midpoint, either moving the midpoint downward and putting splits closer together in the lower frequencies (negative values) or moving the midpoint higher and having splits closer together in the upper frequencies (positive values)
- Split Pinch kinks the frequency split pattern, either bunching more splits around the midpoint (positive values) or putting more splits into the sides (negative values)
- In the device's display, the interactive white dot controls Split Bend when dragged left to right, and Split Pinch when dragged up and down; it's fun
- The Spectral Limiter option sets a maximum Threshold level for each individual frequency bin
- In the device's display, the Threshold is shown with a horizontal orange bar that can be dragged up or down
New Spectral Suite device: Harmonic Split (Spectral):
- Tracks the fundamental frequency of the incoming sound, for splitting Nonharmonics (gray) to one channel and dividing harmonics between Harmonics A (orange) and Harmonics B (turquoise) channels, for individual mixing and processing
- Harmonics Pattern decides how harmonics are distributed between the A and B channels
- The default setting of 2 places every 2nd harmonic in A channel, so the A channel will be odd harmonics (1st, 3rd, 5th, etc.), and the B channel receives all even harmonics (2nd, 4th, 6th, etc.)
- A setting of 4, for example, would place the 1st, 5th, 9th, etc. harmonics in channel A, and all other harmonics (2nd, 3rd, 4th; 6th, 7th…) into channel B
- Higher values lead to narrower results in the A channel — and the potential for more extreme processing without "getting into trouble"
- A setting of 1 is special, routing only the fundamental to channel A and all other harmonics to channel B
- Nonharmonic Sensitivity is a relative control for how picky the harmonic vs. non-harmonic split is, where a higher Sensitivity value allows less audio into the Nonharmonic channel — and more audio into the two Harmonics channels
- The Maximum Harmonics Inspector parameter allows you to limit the number of harmonics being tracked, acting as a "ceiling" when you want fewer frequencies in the Harmonics A and B channels
- Fundamental tracking can be adjusted with several analysis parameters:
- Tilt favors the high frequencies (when positive) or low frequencies (when negative), useful when the desired fundamental is filtered in the sound, etc.
- The Low-cut Frequency and High-cut Frequency parameters narrow the frequency tracking area
- An amplitude Detection Threshold can be set, keeping moments that stay below that level in the Nonharmonics channel
- In the device's display, the Detection Threshold and Cut Frequencies are interactive lines that can be dragged
- The device display also illustrates the currently-detected fundamental with a white dot and moving crosshairs
New Spectral Suite device: Loud Split (Spectral):
- Uses two thresholds to separate the Quiet (green), Mid (yellow), and Loud (red) portions of the incoming sound, for individual mixing and processing
- A Higher Threshold (red) sets the level where stronger signals are considered Loud
- A Lower Threshold (green) sets the level where weaker signals are considered Quiet
- In the device's display, both thresholds are visualized as horizontal lines, which can be dragged up and down
- When clicking a line's dot handle on the right, only the outer band of that threshold will be heard while the mouse is held
- Any signal falling between the two thresholds is considered Mid
- Relative Loudness Mode follows the level of the incoming sound, treating 0.0 dB as the strongest band at any given moment
- Relative Loudness Mode uses separate Relative Higher Threshold and Relative Lower Threshold parameters
- Each threshold has its own Knee value, for setting the transition (and effective crossfade) between adjacent channels
- In the device's display, ALT-dragging on either threshold adjusts its Knee parameter
- Rise Time sets the number of blocks before a softer signal fully transitions up into a louder band, like a "resistance" parameter
- Fall Time sets the number of blocks before a louder signal fully falls down into a quieter band, like a "decay" parameter
- Tilt is an analysis parameter, favoring the high frequencies (when positive) or low frequencies (when negative) before the channel splitting is applied
- New Spectral Suite device: Transient Split (Spectral):
- Separates the Transients (short, unstable sounds; colored yellow) and Tones (periodic or pitched sounds; colored blue), for individual mixing and processing
- Analysis Bias either skews the detection to favor Transients (positive values) or Tones (negative values)
- The Transient Type Inspector parameter switches between two different algorithms for which type of Transient is being looked for:
- Percussive searches for typical impact transients, good for drums or other things that "click" and "smack"
- Noise looks for noisy smears, or even reverb residue
- Transients Decay sets a time (in blocks) for extending detected Transients, allowing them to release
- Tones Smoothing sets a time (in blocks) for extending detected Tones, allowing them to decay
- Tilt Amount is an analysis parameter that is colored yellow as it is oriented to how it affects the Transients channel; its effect is the opposite for the Tones channel
- The Tilt Mode Inspector parameter changes the method of Tilt applied, between a Standard model that favors the Transient channel's high frequencies (when positive) or its low frequencies (when negative), or a Contour approach that subtly adjusts the mid frequencies vs. the highs & lows
- Transient/Tones Blend is the audio balance at the output of the spectral section, before each signal reaches its channel
The Display Style of this device is unique, with two modes:
- Waveform shows a split amplitude domain representation of the two groups
- Sonogram offers the recent frequency-domain history for each group
New Features:
- There is now a Japanese translation of the Bitwig Studio v4.3.0 manual
- Device context menus have be reorganized so that device-specific entries come near the top of the list (for example, the Spectrum Displays setting for three of the Spectral devices)
更新時間:2022-09-28
更新細節:
What's new in this version:
New:
- Option to specify partial release date display format
Fixed:
- Daily update triggers don't work properly
- Can't confirm changes when editing game field with a controller in Fullscreen mode
- Performance regression with some themes
- "Start minimized" option not working
- Various issues related to install size calculation
更新時間:2022-09-25
更新細節:
What's new in this version:
Fixed:
- Play time data being lost in some cases if automatic time import is set to "Always"