Brett,

Are you saying that you were able to solve this problem on your Windows 7 
system?  It is my 
understanding that this isn't strictly a driver issue, but I would love to be 
wrong.

Best regards,

Steve Jacobson


On Thu, 27 Oct 2011 13:00:58 -0600, Brett Boyer wrote:

>Hi! There has to be a better solution than keep an old machine around. Even 
>a cheap USB sound card might be better than that. Also updating drivers is 
>very important. I had this same problem a while back with my windows 7 
>esktop. I do not have a dedicated separate sound card just the one that is 
>on the mother board.
>bb
>Brett Boyer
>Audio Production and voice over
>http://brettboyer.voices.com
>Brett Boyer's Big Bag of Goodies!
>Check out my radio show at my new home:
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>----- Original Message ----- 
>From: "Kane Brolin" <[email protected]>
>To: "PC Audio Discussion List" <[email protected]>
>Sent: Thursday, October 27, 2011 11:42 AM
>Subject: Re: Clarifying My Problem With Laptop's Not Recording Sound 
>CardOutput


>> On 10/27/11, Steve Jacobson <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> Are you now using Windows 7 and have your past successful experiences 
>>> been
>>> with Windows XP?  ...  There are things about Windows 7 that I
>>> don't completely understand.  For example, I've accidentally had 
>>> Eloquence come > out of my headphones while Windows sounds still came
>>> out of my speakers with the same sound card, but I have not been able to 
>>> do
>>> this intentionally.
>>
>> Steve, you have it pegged correctly.  Yes, my previous experiences
>> have involved Windows XP Professional, while all of the issues I am
>> trying to overcome here are with a Windows 7 notebook.  Yes, I too
>> have had that funny separation occur involving JAWS coming out of a
>> different output channel from the one where multimedia content is
>> playing.  I've not figured that one out, either.
>>
>> I've not tried direct sound recording yet with a Windows 7 desktop
>> that has a separate, dedicated sound card.  So far I've used only this
>> notebook with built-in, integrated sound.  Regardless of the cause, a
>> third-party software solution is logical to try; but the one which
>> appears to work, according to testimonials I have read, seems to be
>> inaccessible.
>>
>> Ultimately, my solution might look like keeping an older XP PC or
>> netbook around just to make and process simple sound recordings, as
>> well as other functions that don't necessarily require a lot of
>> memory-intensive multitasking.  My Windows 7 notebook is fast, and its
>> function above all is to perform tasks related to profitable work.
>> For this, I am satisfied it will do just fine.
>>
>> -Kane
>>
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