The Audio Control Reality Check
So you've made the switch from Windows to Mac — congratulations! The hardware is gorgeous, the build quality is solid, and macOS feels polished. But then you try to turn down Chrome's volume without affecting your Spotify, and you realize something's missing.
Where's the volume mixer?
If you're coming from Windows, you're probably used to the system volume mixer that's been there since Windows Vista. Right-click the volume icon, click "Open Volume Mixer," and boom — individual volume sliders for every app. It's so basic that you never thought about it until it wasn't there.
What macOS Does Differently (And Why)
Apple took a different approach with audio control. Instead of a system-wide volume mixer, macOS focuses on output device selection and assumes you'll control volume within each app. The philosophy is "fewer controls, simpler experience."
This works fine if you:
- Only use one app at a time for audio
- Don't mind adjusting volume in multiple places
- Never have apps that are significantly louder than others
- Don't need to route different apps to different outputs
But if you're used to Windows-style control, this feels like a major step backward.
The Most Common Audio Frustrations for Mac Switchers
Chrome Tabs Are Volume Chaos
You're listening to music in Spotify, then a YouTube video auto-plays in Chrome at full blast. On Windows, you'd just turn down Chrome's volume. On Mac, you either pause Spotify or dive into Chrome's settings.
Discord Calls Are Too Loud
You're in a Discord voice chat while working, but some people are way louder than others. You want to turn down Discord without affecting your focus music. macOS says "figure it out."
No Audio Routing Control
On Windows, you could send game audio to your speakers while keeping Discord chat in your headphones. macOS assumes all audio goes to the same place.
Getting Windows-Style Audio Control on Mac
Method 1: Use Individual App Controls
Some apps have their own volume controls:
- Spotify: Volume slider in the bottom-right corner
- Chrome: Right-click any tab playing audio → adjust volume
- VLC: Built-in volume control that can go above 100%
- Discord: Individual user volume sliders in voice channels
This works, but it's scattered and inconsistent. Not all apps have volume controls, and remembering where each one is gets tedious.
Method 2: System Audio MIDI Setup
Mac has a hidden "Audio MIDI Setup" utility that lets you create aggregate devices and multi-output devices. You can find it in Applications > Utilities.
This is powerful for routing audio to multiple outputs simultaneously, but it doesn't solve the per-app volume problem. It's also complex enough that most people give up halfway through.
Method 3: Dedicated Per-App Audio Control
The most straightforward solution is an app designed specifically for this problem. Soundish brings Windows-style per-app audio control to macOS:
- Individual app volume sliders (0-200% with overdrive)
- Per-app output routing — send Spotify to speakers, Discord to headphones
- One-click muting for any app
- Audio profiles to save and restore configurations
- Multi-process support for browsers like Chrome, Brave, and Edge
It works exactly like you'd expect coming from Windows, without the complexity of professional audio tools.
Audio Output Routing: The Feature You Didn't Know You Missed
Here's something Windows doesn't do well that Mac can excel at: sending different apps to different audio outputs simultaneously.
Imagine:
- Work calls go to your headphones for privacy
- Music plays through your desk speakers for better sound quality
- Notification sounds stay on your laptop speakers so you hear them even with headphones on
This requires per-app output routing, which isn't built into macOS but is available through third-party solutions.
Making the Audio Transition Smoother
Start with what works: Many Mac apps have decent built-in audio controls. Learn where they are in your most-used apps.
Consider your workflow: If you frequently use multiple audio apps simultaneously, invest in proper per-app control rather than fighting with scattered controls.
External monitors complicate things: If you're using external monitors with built-in speakers, macOS sometimes disables volume controls entirely. Having per-app control becomes even more valuable.
Don't expect it to work like Windows: Even with third-party solutions, macOS audio will feel different. That's not necessarily worse — just different.
The Bottom Line
Switching from Windows to Mac means adapting to Apple's audio philosophy: simpler controls, fewer options, more app-specific management. For some people, this is liberating. For others, it's frustrating.
If you fall into the "frustrated" category, you're not stuck with it. Per-app audio control exists on Mac — it just requires the right tools to unlock it. The good news? Once you set it up, it often works better than Windows ever did.
Welcome to Mac. The audio control you want is definitely possible.
Originally published at appish.app
Top comments (0)