User Manual

WORKING WITH HOST AUDIO SOFTWARE
55
Responsiveness of transport controls and effect
knobs in AudioDesk, Digital Performer or other
audio software.
Real-time virtual instrument latency.
The buffer setting presents you with a trade-off
between the processing power of your computer
and the delay of live audio as it is being patched
through your software. If you reduce the size, you
reduce monitoring latency, but significantly
increase the overall processing load on your
computer, leaving less CPU bandwidth for things
like real-time effects processing. On the other
hand, if you increase the buffer size, you reduce the
load on your computer, freeing up bandwidth for
effects, mixing and other real-time operations.
Figure 6-7: When adjusting the buffer size to reduce monitoring
latency, watch the ‘processor’ meter in Digital Performer or
AudioDesk’s Performance Monitor. If you hear distortion, or if the
Performance meter is peaking, try raising the buffer size.
If you are at a point in your recording project where
you are not currently working with live, patched-
thru material (e.g. youre not recording vocals), or
if you have a way of externally processing inputs,
choose a higher buffer size. Depending on your
computers CPU speed, you might find that settings
in the middle work best (256 to 1024).
Transport responsiveness
Buffer size also impacts how quickly your audio
software will respond when you begin playback,
although not by amounts that are very noticeable.
Lowering the buffer size will make your software
respond faster; raising the buffer size will make it a
little bit slower.
Effects processing and automated mixing
Reducing latency with the buffer size setting has
another benefit: it lets you route live inputs through
the real-time effects processing and mix
automation of your audio software.
WORKING WITH ON-BOARD MIXING AND
EFFECTS
the Stage-B16 provides powerful mixing, EQ,
compression and reverb, which can operate hand-
in-hand with your hosts mixing environment. For
example, the Stage-B16 can serve as a monitor
mixer, routing channels to musicians, or it can
serve as an integrated extension of your hosts
mixing environment. You can even save a
particular mixing configuration as a preset for
future recall. For details, see “Mixing tab on
page 15.