

uploads/default/original/2X/0/055b7dc3b6cde63b9889d8b139c4773db2c90b42.mp3ĪSUS tightly control eee pc’s - there may not be any generic Microsoft drivers. Just the basic idea, and of course needs work…a kind of a sketch to be developed further. Or perhaps find a vocalist, use it as a song section, etc. Here’s a little something I put together as I experimented with some looping with Audacity tonight.Ī few ideas I mic recorded into Audacity, looped them, and mixed them, adding some effects, EQ, etc.Ī kind of backing track over which I can improvise. When I choose mono at Audacity devices…probably again a Realtek driver thing…so I’ll just go with stereo…but it does make the workspace a little more cluttered when all I need is mono…but no problem really…wanted to note the plug adapter (for some reason not able to get any record signal at all Record signal to show up in both channels in Audacity. Until just the right somewhat random combination of fiddlings and recording tests did get the recordingsīy the way, I put a stereo adapter on the end of my mono mic 1/8" plug and it helped very much by getting I would find a way to tweak the apparently buggy bundled with the driver audio manager…and tweak away I did Reappeared and demanded a driver…so off to ASUS i went, hoping that with a fresh reinstall of the driver To load some generic audio driver just to get rolling with some recording, but no…the realtek device I tried unistalling the realtek driver, and the Realtek device, hoping a reboot would somehow cause Windows Also in its Microphone section when I enabled “Noise Suppression”, and/or “Acoustic EchoĬancellation”, no record signal into Audacity, but with those disabled, yes, record signal into Audacity. for example when I tried recording directly after installing the driver, no recording signal.īut after seleting a sonic “environment” in the manager, then clicking reset in the environments section, But which settings caused it to work I do not know for sure. Then it was just a matter of adjusting some settings in the Realtek Audio Manager that the installedĭriver also installed.


It appears that the recording pitch problem was corrected by installing the updated audio driver. Of actual sample rates…and I left these always at default “Best”) Sample Rate Conversion Quality> with a slider with three options from Good to Best…but no indications (…except perhaps at XP’s Sounds and Audio Device Properties> Volume> Speaker Settings> Advanced> Performance>

Where there is any options to change sample rates, like there are on newer versions of Windows. I saw no place in the Realtek Audio Manager, and no place at all on Windows XP (will update when I can) Did you find a playback effect in the Realtek Control Panel that directly changed pitch?
