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Potplayer has stopped working
Potplayer has stopped working













potplayer has stopped working
  1. #POTPLAYER HAS STOPPED WORKING DRIVERS#
  2. #POTPLAYER HAS STOPPED WORKING SOFTWARE#
  3. #POTPLAYER HAS STOPPED WORKING PC#

How can I use ASIO input and still get PC speaker output?

#POTPLAYER HAS STOPPED WORKING SOFTWARE#

It will not output through your computer speakers on a software level, because your speakers are not part of the mix. TLDR: When using ASIO exclusive mode, you need an external output connected directly to your ASIO hardware device.

potplayer has stopped working

What would happen if you could do this would be the sound signal would travel back and forth between your audio interface and your PC speakers infinitely, creating the most awful sound known to mankind as it looped back and forth, getting progressively louder and screechier by the second.

#POTPLAYER HAS STOPPED WORKING DRIVERS#

This is not possible, because your computer speakers are not a part of the ASIO drivers on a software level. What you’re basically asking is for the audio signal to travel from your audio device to your PC, be mixed in the DAW, then travel back to your audio device, then travel back to your computer’s speakers. It then sends the signal back to your audio interface, to go through the OUTPUT line. You are sending signal from the audio device to your PC over USB. Remember that ASIO is a hardware-dedicated driver, which exclusively uses the hardware device. Shouldn’t I get audio output from my computer speakers at the same time I’m recording an instrument, using ASIO drivers? My audio device is connected to my PC via USB. To hear audio output from ASIO, you need to connect a cable from the device’s output, to your computer’s input ( or an alternative pair of speakers not connected to your computer). When ASIO is chosen as the audio system, the ASIO-enabled device becomes the input/output source. ASIO Mode: Input detected over USB, can’t select Windows audio ( e.g. Now that we’ve explained the various audio systems, lets troubleshoot some common audio issues when working with DAWs. For example, many USB DACs, audio interfaces, and digital effects pedals have dedicated ASIO drivers available directly from their manufacturers. ASIO is the preferred audio system for input recording if you have a hardware device with its own ASIO drivers. ASIO: A dedicated hardware-level driver, it typically has true bitrate support and virtually no latency.So if you have a DAW open in WASAPI mode, you will not hear any audio from a YouTube video in Google Chrome – because WASAPI mode in the DAW has taken exclusive control of the audio driver. WASAPI: This is similar to DirectSound, except that it uses an “Exclusive” mode, which means that whatever app you’re using WASAPI mode in will take complete control of the audio driver.WDM Kernel Streaming: Another ancient legacy audio mode that is a little less CPU intensive than WaveOut, but should be avoided.

potplayer has stopped working

WaveOut: An extremely outdated predecessor to DirectSound, this should never be used, unless your audio drivers are so borked it is somehow the only thing that works ( I’ve seen this before).The problem with DirectSound for recording with live monitoring ( real-time playback while recording at the same time) is that DS introduces a large amount of latency, as your input ( guitar, keyboard, etc) passes through the emulation layer before being output. It is a universal way for all audio devices to work properly with Windows. DirectSound: Belongs to the Microsoft DirectX API.















Potplayer has stopped working