This cookie is native to PHP applications. The purpose of this cookie is to check whether or not the user has given the consent to the usage of cookies under the category 'Preferences'. This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The purpose of this cookie is to check whether or not the user has given the consent to the usage of cookies under the category 'Performance'. The purpose of this cookie is to check whether or not the user has given the consent to the usage of cookies under the category 'Necessary'. The purpose of this cookie is to check whether or not the user has given the consent to the usage of cookies under the category 'Analytics'. The purpose of this cookie is to check whether or not the user has given their consent to the usage of cookies under the category 'Advertisement'. And why only two profiles? All in all, not impressed, even for just a couple of bucks.This cookie is managed by AWS and is used for load balancing. Remembering different keyboard shortcuts for different apps gets old very quickly. It works, but why not simply add a popup to the menu bar item (maybe on a right click) to switch profiles. Why this is not on the Profiles page, is beyond me. The only option I finally discovered was hidden on the Application Preferences panel and allows you to assign a hotkey to a profile.
Well, it took me a while just to find out how to switch profiles.
So I set one to Bluetooth headset for in and output, and the second one to laptop mic and USB speakers. I give it a couple of stars because there's a half-baked option to set up Device Profiles. It just stays on what was set in the Sound control panel. None of this happens when I turn the bluetooth headset on and off. So I expected it to switch output to my headset when it's connected, otherwise to USB speakers when the laptop is docked, and if not, use the in-built speakers. Switch Input and Output Device is enabled, and Only On Startup disabled. I set my bluetooth headset to priority 2, USB speakers to 1, and laptop speakers to 0. This is why you can't adjust volume via softwareįrom the description it seems you can set priorities to different devices, so my-maybe naive-assumption was that input and output would be set based on the priorities assigned to whatever device was attached.
HDMI contains no volume information: volume control is the responsibilty of the device that renders audio, eg, the monitor, TV etc. Apple no longer allows 3rd party apps to see or view AirPlay devices If you have headphones physically plugged in then your internal speakers are disabled for some Apple hardware. It does not support AirPlay or AirPlay 2 devices.ĪudioSwitcher is ideal if you have multiple sound devices attached to your Mac and want to be able to switch between them without having to use System Preferences. You can quickly change the sample rate or output to multiple devices at the same time.ĪudioSwitcher supports any device directly attached to the host system: USB, DisplayPort, HDMI, Thunderbolt and Bluetooth. In addition you can change the volume and other properties of each device without having to change your current input / output. AudioSwitcher is a menu bar that allows you to switch quickly between all available input and output devices.