While I don’t think this is the case in this instance, it is worth mentioning that just because you saw it in your case, doesn’t mean there aren’t more things going on there as well. To give an example, for a long time only firewire chipsets made by TI were used for professional audio because other chipsets would not perform stably and well. For instance I have had several laptops that share the USB bus internally with other devices such as SD card readers, etc.Įven beyond that it could be a specific combination of things. Just because there is nothing else plugged into a USB port doesn’t mean there isn’t anything else on the bus. The Ardour software can also be used for multitrack recording and audio editing. So a few comments, not doubting your experience there, it is likely very correct. This tool allows you to cut, stretch and split your audio recordings. I plugged into a USB 2.0 bus that had nothing else on it, and bingo! No more pops. Then I stumbled across a YouTube video that mentioned the USB 3 vs USB2 thing. It can be used on machines without any audio interface at all, or on a machine with 3 interfaces that each handle 26 channels in each direction (e.g. Nama is a text-based application for multitrack recording, mixing and mastering using the Ecasound audio engine developed by Kai Vehmanen. Bump the periods up to 2048 and the interval roughly doubled. Ecasound-based multitrack recorder/mixer. Set the Jack period from 1024 to 512, the pops came faster, ~17 seconds. The software is very complex and only suitable for people who have experience editing and mixing music on a professional level. I made a test recording, got got a pop every 37 seconds. Ardour allows you to record a track, edit it, and mix it. I had nothing else plugged into the 3.0 bus, theoretically it should work fine.
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