Put in a second sound "card" (USB on a laptop) and assign Audition to it. Did that with Audition 3.0 & Scott TLC on the same machines.
OMG!!! Fantastic idea!!! Then take the audio from both cards and run it through a y-cable into the board/router so you don't lose an input. Or not. If you have the space, use two inputs. This could certainly un-knot a lot of Calvins in my plant.boiseengineer said:Put in a second sound "card" (USB on a laptop) and assign Audition to it. Did that with Audition 3.0 & Scott TLC on the same machines.
TomT said:But using Skype or similar devices for a "live" remote where you need to hear the air signal would be difficult, if not impossible, without some kind of ifb feed back from studio.
That's almost how one of our shows works: the host is in studio, the co-host is on Skype from three time zones away, and it's all mixed in the control room with no delay issues at all.shreveville said:Thanks spinjector and PTBoardOp94. That's what I was hoping to hear. I would be interested to know if anyone has used Skype in the manner I mentioned - The talkshow host would be at a remote location using Skype and his audio would be mixed back at the station with the callers. I know TV anchors have delay problems when talking via satellite to reporters. I thought there may be similar problems.
TomT said:Remember that even cell phone connections have a delay--but it is not between both ends of the call, only in relation to real time. (Think about it--you are on a cell phone with the studio--conversation seems in real time. But if you were to listen to the air signal you would discover your audio shows up on air a significant fraction of a second after you talk. Enough to throw off your conversation)
So there would not be a problem with a call in show. But using Skype or similar devices for a "live" remote where you need to hear the air signal would be difficult, if not impossible, without some kind of ifb feed back from studio.
DudeFan said:@spin If he's using a mobile broadband card, the answer is "yes." Just this past evening we had a terrible time with our Verizon card keeping a decent connection with our Access, with is designed to optimize the connection and reconnect ASAP automatically. Wireless broadand is "best efforts." This means you are subject to the variability of the network. Almost every other time from this location, we never have a problem. But last night, 3G was unavailable and we limped along on just slightly better than dial-up speeds. It happens, even where you least expect it.
the_scoop said:Just curious what kind of settings everyone is using for Skype on both the remote and host ends? I'm trying to iron out the audio settings and I haven't really been able to nail down what I need to set things at. I would expect it would be best to turn off the Automatic level settings for the microphone, but I wanted to see what everyone else has been doing. Also, are you using a broadcast quality soundcard, such as a Lynx, at the host end? Any input is appreciated. Looks like we're going to use this more and more.
LibertyNT said:you know, I cant tell the difference from a broadcast quality audio card and any other audio card.
spinjector said:LibertyNT said:you know, I cant tell the difference from a broadcast quality audio card and any other audio card.
That's because there probably is none. The OEM's buy all the same codec chipsets from the same chinese chip manufacturers. One might argue differences in sample rates, oversampling rates, and filter capacitors, and possibly DSP if they program their own TI chips, but the calculus mathematics is the same all over. Fourier Transforms are Fourier Transforms. In the end, the biggest difference is the marketing spin. People feel better buying a $999.99 Digigram card instead of a $9.99 generic card from the sale bin at the computer superstore. But I'll bet you dinner & beer if you plugged them both in to a car stereo that no one - not you, not me, and especially not the listeners could tell the difference. =-)
spinjector said:Meh. Time compression? Get a TARDIS for that! ;-)
SRP said:spinjector said:LibertyNT said:you know, I cant tell the difference from a broadcast quality audio card and any other audio card.
That's because there probably is none. The OEM's buy all the same codec chipsets from the same chinese chip manufacturers. One might argue differences in sample rates, oversampling rates, and filter capacitors, and possibly DSP if they program their own TI chips, but the calculus mathematics is the same all over. Fourier Transforms are Fourier Transforms. In the end, the biggest difference is the marketing spin. People feel better buying a $999.99 Digigram card instead of a $9.99 generic card from the sale bin at the computer superstore. But I'll bet you dinner & beer if you plugged them both in to a car stereo that no one - not you, not me, and especially not the listeners could tell the difference. =-)
Well, that's a BIT of an oversimplification.
The "pro" cards (Digigram, Audioscience et. al) do come with hardware and drivers that provide MUCH more functionality than the el-scuzzo $10 cards do (i.e. on-board MP3 decoding, on-the-fly time compression/expansion, etc.) and the analog components are generally of a MUCH higher quality than those cheapie cards. So it's not all "marketing spin".
As for your comparison assertion - on a typical car stereo, you're probably right.
chriscollins said:SRP said:spinjector said:LibertyNT said:you know, I cant tell the difference from a broadcast quality audio card and any other audio card.
That's because there probably is none. The OEM's buy all the same codec chipsets from the same chinese chip manufacturers. One might argue differences in sample rates, oversampling rates, and filter capacitors, and possibly DSP if they program their own TI chips, but the calculus mathematics is the same all over. Fourier Transforms are Fourier Transforms. In the end, the biggest difference is the marketing spin. People feel better buying a $999.99 Digigram card instead of a $9.99 generic card from the sale bin at the computer superstore. But I'll bet you dinner & beer if you plugged them both in to a car stereo that no one - not you, not me, and especially not the listeners could tell the difference. =-)
Well, that's a BIT of an oversimplification.
The "pro" cards (Digigram, Audioscience et. al) do come with hardware and drivers that provide MUCH more functionality than the el-scuzzo $10 cards do (i.e. on-board MP3 decoding, on-the-fly time compression/expansion, etc.) and the analog components are generally of a MUCH higher quality than those cheapie cards. So it's not all "marketing spin".
As for your comparison assertion - on a typical car stereo, you're probably right.
That's a little misleading too. Most Digigram cards don't do sample rate conversion or mp3 decoding in the DSP. That is usually passed on to the CPU, but none of us should be using compression anyway, right?