At the time I think I set two rea sound cards as both input and output
hence the feedback.
Christopher Hallsworth
On 16/04/2012 13:46, Brent Harding wrote:
The one bad thing I heard of about VAC being a possible problem is the
added delay. I think each repeater instance by default adds a quarter to
half a second of buffer to keep the audio smooth, but I'm not sure how
far down one can get away with before you do get skipping. The other
thing that could've caused your feedback sound over time is that I
thought the manual said that by being a software emulated device, it
tries its best, but cannot quite keep in sync to the sample rate of the
hardware, which could be something that drifts over time and needs a
tear-down and reset.
----- Original Message ----- From: "chris hallsworth"
<christopher...@gmail.com>
To: "PC Audio Discussion List" <pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Monday, April 16, 2012 5:44 AM
Subject: Re: Question about virtual audio cable
Thanks! Sorry for all this, asking as when I tried this before some
time ago, I ended up with terrible feedback! You know like audio is
constantly looping mixed with feedback noise? Ugh!
Christopher Hallsworth
On 16/04/2012 11:28, David Truong wrote:
Yes, correct. Audio repeater will be doing the monitoring for you. Set
streaming program to use virtual audio cable1 as this is where NVDA and
where your other music etc should be coming through if you have told
said
programs to use VAC1 as the sound device to output to.
David Truong
Email: blindbo...@me.com
blindbo...@gmail.com
MS Messenger: davidtru...@optusnet.com.au
Phone: 07 3844 1678
Mobile: 0400 557 511
Facebook: http://facebook.com/Changa181
Skype: blindboxer1967
-----Original Message-----
From: pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org
[mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org]
On Behalf Of chris hallsworth
Sent: Monday, 16 April 2012 5:25 PM
To: PC Audio Discussion List
Subject: Re: Question about virtual audio cable
Thanks, so I take it using audio repeater for example I set virtual
cable 1
as input and the real sound card as output? Then in the streaming
application set it to use cable 1 as output? Just want clarification
because
I understand the concept but so far when I tried this with NVDA using
cable
1 as both input and output then getting NVDA to use cable 1 I didn't
get any
sound even though the audio repeater was running.
Christopher Hallsworth
On 16/04/2012 04:30, David Truong wrote:
Short answer is yes.
David Truong
Email: blindbo...@me.com
blindbo...@gmail.com
MS Messenger: davidtru...@optusnet.com.au
Phone: 07 3844 1678
Mobile: 0400 557 511
Facebook: http://facebook.com/Changa181
Skype: blindboxer1967
-----Original Message-----
From: pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org
[mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org]
On Behalf Of chris hallsworth
Sent: Sunday, 15 April 2012 7:36 PM
To: PC Audio Discussion List
Subject: Question about virtual audio cable
If one uses the driver as a recording source, could one record
internet streams without the speech mixing into it? I know this is an
issue for some particularly on Windows Vista and later and do not wish
to use an external sound card. As far as I can see I know this can be
done with Virtual Audio Streaming simply by setting the playback
device to the virtual card in the application where the stream is to be
played.
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