Hi John, I couldn't hear myself speaking, and did not check the audio card's loopback. I'm going to check all that you mentioned, thanks for your suggestions ! Oh and by the way yes, in the title I meant monodirectional, not monodimensional ;)
Thibault. John I. Quebedeaux, Jr wrote: > I can think of one instance, yes, when echo canceling is improperly setup - > canceling oneself off or the other side off inadvertently. > > Long ago I remember this happening when someone's audio wasn't configured > properly for echo canceling. > > Be sure that you are using only the audio coming from the remote site for > echo canceling reference. This is usually referenced as the 'speaker' as in > the audio that comes from your audio speakers - but that can be problematic > if you're reinforcing your own audio into your own room - i.e. If you're > hearing your own microphone in your speakers. Properly one should only > cancel the remote audio (from the computer/rat specifically). > > One quick test, do you hear yourself when you speak even without any remote > sites set to speak? Is the audio card's loopback muted? (on windows, that's > the line in channel on the card is muted). > > The only other thing I can think of is an audio card is monodirectional... I > forget the actual term. > > Perhaps there is something else, but those are off the top of my head... And > perhaps they're not related... but I know to check these things! > > -John Q. > >