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In Reply to: RE: Windows 10 and 41,000 Hz audio posted by Jaundiced Ear on July 02, 2015 at 21:03:54
"I am saying that it is a test machine for the Windows 10 previews, and for the last month or so a pretty core part of Windows audio has been broken. If you set the audio output to 44100Hz, you get NO sound output."
Windows audio is of zero interest to anyone serious. It is a non-issue.
Follow Ups:
I have to disagree. While "serious" may mean a studio or producer of commercial projects with extensive facilities, multiple sessions and lots of editing, it can also mean someone - such as myself - who does recordings for schools and other organizations like churches and local performing groups, who will not pay $1,000+ to have their recording done on a purpose-built audio recording and editing system. I know a guy who has such a rig for location recording. He brings $25,000 worth of stuff to a site, and gets paid $500 for 6 hours of work. The numbers just don't add up. On the other hand, a Win-based PC with a good sound card, a FireWire or other interface, five good microphones and preamps can be had for under $10,000, and still get paid $300 - $500 for the job.:)
Edits: 07/03/15
As carcass93 already mentioned players will bypass the Win audio.
I misunderstood. I thought you were talking about dedicated hard drive recorders which don't use Windows PCs.
:)
I personally do not do any computer recording and I think most here do not either. The last recording I did was on half track tape several milleniums ago! :)
Instead, to built-in audio facilities (services etc.) in Windows OS, which get completely bypassed in properly used for audio playback Windows machine.
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