We had a similar problem with one iteration of Simian when we replaced a pci trigger card with a usb device, but they cured that in the later versions. My best guess at the time was that the USB trigger device and the USB dongle were fighting each other. End result was that the machine paused for a fraction after playing each element of the stop set--ending up in breaks running long.
We have had problems in the past with the ABC classic rock net--but they just liked to run their windows too short. Since switched to Dial Global and those problems ended, for the most part. However, most systems take a fraction of time to react to the netques, so the net should give a slight pause before hitting the fill material in optional breaks to avoid a "burp" of sound before the system switches. We also try to keep spot lengths consistent, using time stretch when necessary; remember some systems show spot lengths as :30 or :60 when they are actually :30.25 (for example). Adds up in a 4 minute stopset.
Simian, when used with the audio science sound cards, uses that audio card's virtual mixer to provide smooth segues (either a fixed overlap or an overlap set when you load that audio file).
Of course, Simian lacks the touch-screen feature of the iMediatouch systems, which is much more useful for live-assist formats. And it will not work over a network, although you can load spots and logs into it through a network.
We have had problems in the past with the ABC classic rock net--but they just liked to run their windows too short. Since switched to Dial Global and those problems ended, for the most part. However, most systems take a fraction of time to react to the netques, so the net should give a slight pause before hitting the fill material in optional breaks to avoid a "burp" of sound before the system switches. We also try to keep spot lengths consistent, using time stretch when necessary; remember some systems show spot lengths as :30 or :60 when they are actually :30.25 (for example). Adds up in a 4 minute stopset.
Simian, when used with the audio science sound cards, uses that audio card's virtual mixer to provide smooth segues (either a fixed overlap or an overlap set when you load that audio file).
Of course, Simian lacks the touch-screen feature of the iMediatouch systems, which is much more useful for live-assist formats. And it will not work over a network, although you can load spots and logs into it through a network.