
Kanto Karaoke supports all multimedia formats : MP3, Mid, Kar, Kfn, Mp3 + Cdg , karaoke videos ( . Avi, .Wmv, .Mp4, etc …) .

Record your voice on the music, sing and record your performance! Mic settings available.

Direct conversion midi to mp3, with or without melody track. High quality sound in output thanks to soundfonts.
Finally a karaoke player that supports all audio and video karaoke formats
is a must-have for GT5 players who have finished the game legitimately and want to experiment, or for those recovering lost saves. It is not a "trainer" (no real-time memory editing) but a precise, safe save editor when used correctly.
Several save editors exist for GT5, but remains the most popular for three reasons:
But in the dimly lit corners of the internet, on forums like GTPlanet and obscure German hardware boards, a rebellion was brewing. They didn't want to race for credit; they wanted to engineer perfection. They wanted to break the game’s physics over their knee.
The tool didn't appear out of nowhere. It was the evolution of months of work by a shadowy developer known in the community only by his handle. He wasn't a hacker in the malicious sense; he was an architect. He realized that the save file for Gran Turismo 5—stored on the PS3’s internal hard drive as a encrypted package—was a Pandora’s Box.
Free version edition for Windows and MAC users!
is a must-have for GT5 players who have finished the game legitimately and want to experiment, or for those recovering lost saves. It is not a "trainer" (no real-time memory editing) but a precise, safe save editor when used correctly.
Several save editors exist for GT5, but remains the most popular for three reasons: GT5-Garage-Editor-V131
But in the dimly lit corners of the internet, on forums like GTPlanet and obscure German hardware boards, a rebellion was brewing. They didn't want to race for credit; they wanted to engineer perfection. They wanted to break the game’s physics over their knee. is a must-have for GT5 players who have
The tool didn't appear out of nowhere. It was the evolution of months of work by a shadowy developer known in the community only by his handle. He wasn't a hacker in the malicious sense; he was an architect. He realized that the save file for Gran Turismo 5—stored on the PS3’s internal hard drive as a encrypted package—was a Pandora’s Box. They didn't want to race for credit; they