Tue, 22 May 2007 ![]() Well hello again! What have you been up to? Us? Well you'll just have to listen. But we will tell you this...We are wide awake thanks to 5 Hour Energy, and we want to have some fun with you! Puppies are in danger due to people falling down steps. Don't stand too close to us, you might catch bad luck. Jeff thinks about the master...and a whole bunch of nut job stories (that might make sense once you hear this) And stuff in the news you won't hear about on CNN. Thanks to: Jason from The Nobodies and Leigh from ChicagoScope.com And we can't thank you listeners enough! We are here because of you! Comments[3] |
I've googled your question a bit and found that it looks like the problem is that Audacity and your sound-card & mic drivers are all software. That means it takes you computer some time and energy to do their stuff, and that time translates to "latency" (delay) 300 milisecons is the default in Windows with their drivers. No way to remove the latency using software--completely--me thinks.
Still one guy I found said that some drivers are better on latency than others--like ASIO4ALL--which gives him 13 miliseconds and works good enough for him. Problem is that driver doesn't work with Audacity so the guy suggests another free program, "Kristal Audio Engine".
I'd suggest going to podcast pickle and posting your question there on the forums. Folks there are famously helpful and must be more knowledgable than little-old-me. I'd be curious if anyone there had a better answer thank I could come up with.
They might say you need a hardware solution (a mixer) to be able to listen in live to your recording with no latency at all. That's my guess. Let me know how you get on, and thanks for listening to my little podcast!
-Kevin
posted by: Kevin on Wed, 5/23 07:07 AM EDT
Thanks Mike and Jeff! fun fun fun
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