AFMG Becomes German Distributor for EASE, EASERA, and SysTune Berlin-based AFMG, creator of EASE, the software for acoustic simulation, assumed the German distribution of its software packages EASE, EASERA, and SysTune as of this month. This decision joins sales of AFMG's complete software products in the hands of the maker, thus greatly simplifying the approach for customers in German-speaking countries. With this step, AFMG also wants to strengthen the bonds between customers and developers in order to react to market demands more quickly and flexibly. Former German sales partner audioone will continue sales and support through March of this year to guarantee a smooth transition. "Our relations with audioone are very cordial." remarks Stefan Feistel, managing director of AFMG. "We have made this move with great accord to provide continuous and extensive support to our customers now and in future. All our software from audio measurement through to acoustical simulation will now be available from one distributor." Historically, AFMG has been the distributor of the applications EASE Focus, EASE Address, and EASE SpeakerLab. Additionally, several new versions and programs will be available soon -- all of them with improvements in the fields of acoustical room simulation and calibration of sound systems. EASE is the acoustic simulation software for both inside rooms and in open areas. Rooms can be defined using a CAD module, absorption coefficients can be assigned to surfaces, and sound sources as well as listener positions can easily be added to the model. Data can then be used to generate an exact simulation of reverberation times, speech intelligibility and other acoustical parameters even before the room itself is built. AFMG's EASERA is the universal software platform for all acoustical, electronic, and audio technical measurements. SysTune is a popular software platform for analyzing and optimizing sound systems in operation. For this, SysTune provides multi-channel measurements in real time, giving sound engineers precise impulse and frequency responses, as well as delay times - even in the middle of the show with an audience present.
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