What a great bit of information. I am loving my new windows 7 machine.
Though there are some older programs I would like back but I didn't buy
premium.
thanks Nick for the informative and concise info
bb
Brett Boyer
Production / Program Director
KZBR 97.1 FM
Alamosa Colorado
www.kzbr971.com
Morning show. Comedy Block. Rockin Hits 24 / 7
----- Original Message -----
From: "Nick G" <n...@hkcradio.com>
To: "PC Audio Discussion List" <pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Sunday, February 28, 2010 7:26 AM
Subject: Re: Managing recording settings in Windows 7.
Right, this email will be fairly long, and not quote any of your email,
because Windows 7 is an entirely new audio paradigm that needs to be
explained. The Windows XP way is flawed, this is the way it should have
been for years.
Windows 7's Audio subsystem is based on the idea that devices are
divided by their drivers into inputs and, if the audio device vender is
clever enough, outputs. One audio card will almost definitely have more
than one input, and possibly more than one output, accessible from any
piece of software that supports multiple input and output devices. As
such, you can use your line in and your microphone at the same time in
different applications.
The Volume control has stopped being the central mixer for Windows
functions, that is now the sound control panel, most easily accessed via
the search box. In its playback and recording tabs, you can easily
control levels and such. One thing that Win 7 is known for is hiding
audio inputs, such as what you hear. A simple "show disabled devices" in
the context menu of the record tab, then enabling them by hovering over
each disabled device and invoking the context menu and selecting enable,
will fix such issues. With a bit of logic, you may set your levels where
necessary, and use your apps to select which input you must record from.
If, for some reason, the apps do not support different inputs and outputs,
you may set the default input or output by simply hovering over the one
you want, invoking your context menu, and selecting the obvious option
that will be presented to you. With a little logic and a bit of thinking
on your feet, you will figure out exactly how to use this new audio
subsystem, and like it.
Oh, and the listen tab. That's a little piece of genius for internet
broadcasters, because any input could be, with minimal latency, listened
to on any output. If you had a USB Microphone, you can listen to the
audio from said USB microphone on any of your other sound cards, and
record using "What you hear" or "stereo mix" like you would with any audio
input on said sound card.
Hope this helps,
Nick
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