Until then, we make do with RX, iZotope, and stubborn EQ moves. But keep an eye on DxO’s patents. If they ever file for “machine learning-based acoustic de-reverberation,” you’ll know DxO 6 is coming. Want me to adjust this to focus on a real DxO product (like DxO PhotoLab 6) instead of a fictional audio version?
DxO has never made audio software. So DxO 6 is pure imagination. But given their AI + measurement DNA, if they ever jumped into audio, they’d skip the “me too” compressors and EQs — and go straight for intelligent repair. And that’s the kind of innovation audio needs right now. Until then, we make do with RX, iZotope,
DxO’s DeepPRIME denoises photos by understanding sensor noise patterns. DxO 6 could do the same for hiss, hum, and reverb tails. Not a generic noise gate — but a neural network trained on thousands of mic preamps, room tones, and cable interference types. Want me to adjust this to focus on
If you’ve ever wrestled with a muddy podcast vocal or a guitar track recorded in a less-than-stellar room, you’ve probably wished for a magic “fix it” button. DxO’s real-world products (like DxO PhotoLab) are famous for optics, but let’s imagine DxO 6 — the rumored, unconfirmed, but tantalizing leap into AI-powered audio repair. Here’s why it matters. But given their AI + measurement DNA, if
DxO 6 would likely ship as a standalone editor and a zero-latency tracking plugin — so singers can hear themselves “fixed” in headphones while recording, without adding delay.