exactly
which part are you aaamazed at
i asked a similar question
and got blown away with hostile arrogant answers
several of which said just buy it and try it and
stop trying to figure out if it would work before spendign my money
hoowah
i never asked this before although i asked something that i could have inferred this from
nobody has ever answered this question
i never dismiss any answers to my actual question
i do dismiss hostile arrogant answers
as well as answers to some question that i did not ask
nonsense -- according to my graduate digital signal textbooks
at best somebody is playing semantic games
nothing can clip in the d-->a conversion
can a bad d/a conversion algorithm/design cause problems
you betcha but not "clipping"
clipping occurs in the d/a when the analog goes higher...
swoosh
i plan to do a *lot* more than he is attempting
nobody has proven that any software does everything yet
my money is limited
so i will take time to make sure it will all work first
some kid getting his money from his parents can just keep buying stuff until he gets bored or he finds a...
do you use any other programs with sonar?
either to supplement its capabilities eg orchestra samples or notation/scorewriter or utilities/special programs so as to do something faster better easier ?
maybe
in theory VSTis will work on any system that supports them
that said, i would check the specific software out and verify it even though the moderators and KIAs here think you should just buy them all and see what works
fuhgeddahbowditt
that is one of the most asked questions on the audacity forums
no practical way to do that
throw enough money and time at it and you might improve it a little --not worth trying it imho
loudness wars
read about loudness wars at wikipedia
limiting to 0 db does not mean it will be loud
just that it does not clip
compress the entire signal into a much smaller db range limited by 0dBFS and you will sound a lot louder still
his way
not dragging anybody
his way was clearly to find an interface he was sure would work
if sonar comes with it then he can be sure it works
otherwise he can run into many problems
even if "research" might indicate it should work
it was perfect advice for him
yes
laptops are harder than desktops as many of them have less built in audio capability. and take more fiddlign to get the options set right.
you could get a free program like audacity and plug a microphone into the internal sound card and record one track at a time. the laptop may have...
binaural ?
are you saying that true binaural would be completely accurate
it plays into each ear exactly what it would have heard live at that ear -- records it then later plays that into the earphone --
why wouldn't that be realistic?