This is actually very ironic because IBM is a 133 billion dollar company. You also have the audacity to suggest that unless A&H takes your advice and creates such a product, they are going to loose out on market share and become the next IBM or GM. You once again suggested a cheap Prime option in a smaller than 48 channel format. Your last post is a microcosm into this exact behavior. You’ll make a post and then when A&H doesn’t announce a new hardware solution that matches what you have suggested, you feel compelled to repost the same basic thing again because you feel like no one heard you and/or your annoyed that no one acted on your ideas. My problem (with you) is that you constantly make the same basic post – asking A&H for the same (proprietary) information and suggesting the same hardware solution. I don’t know why I wasted my time trying to help you. If there was a block feature on this forum, you would be the only person I would be interested in blocking. I’ve said it before and you have just reconfirmed my feelings about you…. Now at the very end you actually have the audacity to say that you don’t care about using ME? This ENTIRE THREAD has been about setting up a system that would work with both Waves AND ME because adding the ME system is the “hard” part whether you are using the Avantis or SQ system. Your first post said, “HOWEVER at this point I do not need the additional channel capacity or bus structure but some of my clients do use IEMs and the ability for them to individually manage their monitoring is a big deal.” and “Will a DX hub facilitate the ability to deploy the 4U IEM monitoring protocol.” This post should have appeared between Hugh’s last post and SteffenR’s post above). If you do this, you want to turn off Transport > Software Playthrough in Audacity.(EDIT – my original post disappeared when I tried to edit it. This may not record in quite so good quality, though. This would let you hear the keyboard audio through the computer speakers (if that is your aim) and then you could record that audio by choosing stereo mix in Audacity. You can of course right-click over Line-in, choose Properties, click the “Listen” tab then send the keyboard audio to your sound playback device. Then right-click over line-in again and make it default, because that is what you want to record from. If the Line-in’s Default Format is set to mono it could explain your issue, though most line-ins do not have a mono choice. Please double-check the suggestion I made which was to right-click over the Line-in (not over stereo mix), choose Properties, then click the “Advanced” tab and make sure “Default Format” is set to a stereo option. That would be expected, because the “stereo mix” device is a special input that records computer playback, and you aren’t playing anything through the computer. When I’ve enabled it, and made it the Default Device, no sound comes through whatsoever, not even only in one channel. I’ve noticed that there is a “Stereo Mix” option, but it was disabled by default. So at this point, I think it’s a problem with my sound card perhaps since the “Stereo Mix” was disabled by default, my sound card doesn’t technically support stereo recording? I’m not sure… It’s not the cables, either, as I’ve tested them separately, and it’s not the keyboard, as I ran the outputs into a set of external speakers and it worked fine. I’ve tested this in multiple programs as well as Audacity, getting the same problem, so now I know that it’s not the software. I’ve now spent the afternoon working on this problem, trying everything from updating the sound card drivers to attempting to reconfigure the devices via an audio deck that came with the sound card. I apologize I meant to clarify that in my first post. Thank you for the quick response! Yes, it does.
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