I just installed a PCI-324 sound card and everything seems to be working so far (though the latency is on the high side), the driver shows up as WDM.
I have heard that ASIO is the better way to go. How do I actually go about selecting the ASIO driver?
How do I select ASIO drivers?
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Discussion related to installation, configuration and use of MOTU hardware such as MIDI interfaces, audio interfaces, etc. for Mac OSX
Discussion related to installation, configuration and use of MOTU hardware such as MIDI interfaces, audio interfaces, etc. for Mac OSX
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- Smokehouse
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The drivers for both WDM and ASIO get installed and are available. You select which you will use from within the software that will use them. For me, I use Cakewalk SONAR so I select Options>Audio... and on the Advanced tab there's a place to select from WDM/KS and ASIO.
What software are you using for your audio work?
What software are you using for your audio work?
"I'll try anything twice."
Dell Latitude E6400 w/ WIN XP SP3, ADS Pyro 1394 FireWire
SONAR 8.5, WaveArts TrackPlus & MasterVerb, AutoTune 4.1
MOTU 828 MKIII, MOTU 828mkII, Presonus Digimax LT
Dell Latitude E6400 w/ WIN XP SP3, ADS Pyro 1394 FireWire
SONAR 8.5, WaveArts TrackPlus & MasterVerb, AutoTune 4.1
MOTU 828 MKIII, MOTU 828mkII, Presonus Digimax LT
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HAMERMAN409,
They (ASIO) are generally used in the audio apps. The OS and most multimedia apps aren't written to use them. Coincidentally, the Cakewalk and Sonic Foundry apps were a couple of the long time "non-ASIO" apps on the PC side, as far as the pro/semi-pro stuff goes. Since a few years back though, pretty much everything supports it. The standard multimedia drivers didn't used to be as thorough either (mainly for stereo i/o with internal clock).
Sorry for the trivia,
George
They (ASIO) are generally used in the audio apps. The OS and most multimedia apps aren't written to use them. Coincidentally, the Cakewalk and Sonic Foundry apps were a couple of the long time "non-ASIO" apps on the PC side, as far as the pro/semi-pro stuff goes. Since a few years back though, pretty much everything supports it. The standard multimedia drivers didn't used to be as thorough either (mainly for stereo i/o with internal clock).
Sorry for the trivia,

George