Thanks, Joe. I dunno how you keep up with all you do. Trust M$ to make an Alp out of an anthill.
73, Mike On 8/8/2010 7:58 PM, Joe Subich, W4TV wrote: > > This will mostly be on XP, with occasional excursions on Win7. > > What does "directly selecting the endpoint" mean? I'm real new > > to Win7. > > When you open the "Volume Mixer" in Windows 7, the "device" box > has a drop down box (down arrow to the right of "Speakers" etc.) > that allows you to select the output to be controlled. With > Vista, there is one entry in the Menu bar that says "device." > In either case you select the "endpoint" (output) to be controlled. > > In Vista/Windows 7 terminology an "endpoint" is the output or input > device (or jack) on a soundcard. For example, "speakers", "headpone", > "HDMI", "SPDIF", etc. A single soundcard may have only one active > input endpoint (mic, line, SPDIF, CD, etc.) and one output endpoint > (speakers, headphone, SPDIF, HDMI, etc.) at a particular time. If > one application opens the Line Input on a soundcard other applications > may not open the Mic Input on that soundcard until the original > application releases the line input. Note - if an input or output > endpoint is defined as the Windows system or communications default > (there are four defaults, system input, system output, communications > input and communications output) they are "locked" and applications > may not change (use) other endpoints on those soundcard(s). > > 73, > > ... Joe, W4TV ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[email protected] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html

