Yeah, it is. Plus, you have heard what it sounds like already to a cirtain
extent. When ever Neal uses his 744-T on pod casts, that's what this thing
sounds like. It's also what the USB Pre2 audio interface sounds like. So he
didn't know what format the projects were saved in then? That's too bad. I
thought he would. Oh well. By the way, I think the overdub stuff only works
at CD quality. In other words, it only works at LPCM 44 thousand 100 KHZ 16
Bit. If I remember correctly anyways. I'd mostly be recording in Blu-ray
quality on it though. Yes, PCM 96 KHZ 24 Bit is Blu-Ray HD audio quality. So
there it is.
-----Original Message-----
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Aidan
Sent: Wednesday, May 01, 2013 6:23 AM
To: PC Audio Discussion List
Subject: Re: motherboard with good onboard audio

Well, its not so difficult, as most of the multi track features can be
figured out when playback and you can also assign the mute and solo to the
f1 and f2 keys. I did ask neil but he couldn't tel me. That other recorder
sounds great.

On 01 May 2013, at 2:21, "Hamit Campos" <hamitcam...@gmail.com> wrote:

Ah yeah. I don't know about that. Perhaps Neal might. But here's the other
thing though. As far as I know, all the multitrack stuff isn't too
accessible. I know someone on this here list did it once, but it doesn't
talk. So, if you can deal with that like Neal can, and like that person can,
then yeah maybe. I want one for the quality. I don't think I'd use the
multitrack thing that much though. On something like the Sound Devices 788-T
I might though. That thing has 8 XLR plugs. So you can use 8 mikes. Import
those into Pro Tools, and you can create 7.1 surround files. Yeah, I'm into
7.1 surround sound. I love surround sound. But yeah. The problem with all
the Sound Devices stuff though is it doesn't talk. I can't deal with it like
Neal can. I'd get lost. I'd have to have some one set it up for me and then
just forget about it. But yeah, back to the LS-100. I like it well enough,
and I do want one, but it's just for the sound quality, and full LPCM 96 KHZ
24 bit. The sound devices goes the next step up in sample rate though, they
do 192 thousand KHZ. That's way cool.

-----Original Message-----
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Aidan
Maher
Sent: Tuesday, April 30, 2013 5:59 PM
To: PC Audio Discussion List
Subject: Re: motherboard with good onboard audio

Yes, I got the focusrite scarlett 2i4 card, and that also dubbles as a midi
interface, very good and really outstanding. I am considering the
ls100 as I get to much latency at the moment and I couldn't solve that yet,
but I have a problem, I am scaired that once I bounce tracks on that
recorder that I won't be able to export everything in one file, because
after you have done 8 tracks you must bounce them in order to make new space
available and to emty the tracks. And the other thing is I am not sure if
you would be able to open that project in audacity or sonar, I mean I don't
no wich format the ls100 save its projects. I also don't no if you can
overdub on one track a few times.

On 30/04/2013, Hamit Campos <hamitcam...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Yeah, external maybe better. Even PCIE like the Sound Blaster ones 
> would do perhaps. Now if like me you want to really go high end, then 
> a pro sound card or in fancy turms an Audio Interface would be best. I 
> so want the Sound Devices USB Pre2. Thing is, it's $600. But if you've 
> heard the few recordings Neal Ewers has made on BCT on his Sound 
> Devices 744-T recorder, then you know it's well worth it. I just don't 
> have the $600 at hand. By the way, even something like an LS-100 or a 
> Zoom H4-N would be good to. Pluss, theres are stand alone recordes too 
> so you aren't always strapped to the PC if you don't want to be.
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Joe
> Sent: Tuesday, April 30, 2013 3:39 PM
> To: pc-audio@pc-audio.org
> Subject: motherboard with good onboard audio
> 
> Hi. The subject asks the question. Is it possible to get a computer 
> with good onboard audio? The last PC I built in 2008 has an Intel 
> DG41RQ MOTHERBOARD THAT BOASTS OF HIGH DEFINITION audio but its far 
> from
that.
> Even
> at 100 percent I can't get a good level. I've tried several 
> microphones so I don't think the mic is the problem. Are they're any 
> computers out there either pree built or home built that have good 
> level audio? or is it always better to just get an external sound card 
> and forget about on board audio.
> Thanks. Joe.
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> 
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