exyll
Junior Member
Posts: 74
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Post by exyll on Apr 26, 2013 12:41:01 GMT
Regarding the cookies, I thought they were supposed to be an award after you come out with a 64 bit version, Michael! ;-) Yes, but I'm seriously concerned about taste and texture, when theyhave been in the mail for more than four years now! Aren't you better of with paypal / flattrdonations :-)
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exyll
Junior Member
Posts: 74
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Post by exyll on Jan 8, 2011 11:03:51 GMT
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exyll
Junior Member
Posts: 74
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Post by exyll on Nov 24, 2010 10:54:07 GMT
I get a tmobile error report for asio4all.com
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exyll
Junior Member
Posts: 74
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Post by exyll on Nov 11, 2010 10:55:35 GMT
omg, when you people will stop giving stupid advices? why disable aero? what does it have to do with sound? NOTHING! just read some pro mags (like Computer Music or Future Music) they will tell you on pcs/laptops with modern hardware it will not cause any performance slowdowns. some of you seem to have stopped in 2005. It *does* help to get lower latency! If you buy good hardware then it does not make a difference but when you use ASIO4ALL to enable ASIO for onboard audio then disabling aero really helps as ASIO4ALL is very cpu intensive unlike external audio cards for example.
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exyll
Junior Member
Posts: 74
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Post by exyll on Nov 11, 2010 10:45:15 GMT
The reason why is mentioned in the manual. It locks your audio device to that it can achieve the low latency that you experience.
If you need to have other audio applications without ASIO running then buy hardware which support ASIO out of the box.
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exyll
Junior Member
Posts: 74
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Post by exyll on Jun 27, 2010 8:34:59 GMT
You could try to roll back to a previous restore point to see it the problem is then gone. Then apply updates seperately until you have found which update causes problems and then report it here.
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exyll
Junior Member
Posts: 74
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Post by exyll on Jun 14, 2010 14:11:59 GMT
I don't exactly know what you are trying to achieve but I think that what you want can be done with VAC. Virtual audio cable can be used to patch virtual out/inputs.
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exyll
Junior Member
Posts: 74
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Post by exyll on Jun 13, 2010 21:26:30 GMT
That is indeed very strange. What is even more strange is that you can still play audio via WinAMP while using ASIO4ALL through Reaper.
I cannot do that on my system.
What is your CPU usage while playing? Select that you want to see each core seperately and see if a core is exhausted in some situations.
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exyll
Junior Member
Posts: 74
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Post by exyll on Jun 13, 2010 21:22:46 GMT
Yes, decrease the latency sliders until you also hear static. I have a very small delay like less then 10ms on my Samson CO3U mic.
If static is heard very soon then you probably have lots of stuff running. Kill about every application you have including virusscanners and see if that helps.
When you still have high latency then your hardware is probably out-of-date. Just buy a new computer :-).
You could also look for updated drivers for you hardware.
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exyll
Junior Member
Posts: 74
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Post by exyll on Jun 13, 2010 21:18:37 GMT
You still need drivers for your hardware. ASIO4ALL is only a ASIO driver that sits on top of your regular device drivers and IS NOT AN HARDWARE driver.
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exyll
Junior Member
Posts: 74
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Post by exyll on Jun 13, 2010 21:14:02 GMT
Only when you change the samplerate or also other settings? I never change samplerate but never seen such behavior on my system with Ableton Live 8.x, Windows 7 x64 and Creative Extreme Gamer + Samson CO3U
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exyll
Junior Member
Posts: 74
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Post by exyll on Jun 13, 2010 21:12:13 GMT
As v2.10 beta was out for ages it is too bad that you did not test it but since yesterday v2.10 is final so try it out and see if it fixes your problem.
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exyll
Junior Member
Posts: 74
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Post by exyll on Jun 13, 2010 21:10:36 GMT
1. Launch the audio application that you are using like cubase, fruityloops, etc. 2. Go to its application settings. 3. Go to its audio settings 3. There you must select ASIO. If it does not support ASIO then you cannot use ASIO4ALL. 4. Select the ASIO4ALL driver to be used for ASIO.
Now a trayicon will become visible where you can change latency and in/out settings.
ASIO4ALL is just a ASIO driver, it is not a replacement driver for your normale windows audio stuff.
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exyll
Junior Member
Posts: 74
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Post by exyll on Jun 1, 2010 22:27:19 GMT
You sum all sort of applications which does not make any sense. Did you configure WinAMP to use ASIO and selected the ASIO4ALL drivers? Are you saying that you do not get static sound in WinAMP via ASIO4ALL and do get static in Reaper, Amplitube and DIG? The only reason that I can think of is that WinAMP is only a sample player. It doesn't really do much. All other apps you mention have internal mixer buffers, etc. to do processing. That takes more processing power which needs larger buffers. Please state more information if I am not correct. By the way, you are not native english. But maybe google translate can translate your question better then you can write in english. translate.google.com/
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exyll
Junior Member
Posts: 74
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Post by exyll on May 31, 2010 18:27:14 GMT
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