There will be fatalities in music careers and music businesses.īut I genuinely hope Steinberg and Cubase will remain amongst the stronger survivors. – And the AI bus is about to hit a lot of participants in a variety of ways. Making a living with music related stuff is becoming harder and harder for music makers and for music software and hardware makers. This is not made any easier by an arguably much more demanding market environment with increased competition and downward revenue pressures, leading to smaller and over-extended teams and slowing ability to deal with growing mountains of work. Sitting between constantly changing hardware and operating systems and constantly changing plugins from countless makers, in addition to refreshing their own code base is a significant software development challenge. Expecting super human foresight, software engineering and communication skills from them (or anyone else) is always going to lead to disappointment and anger. Steinberg gets a lot of heat - some of it arguably justified - but they’re also juggling a lot of issues not of their own making. So small 4k monitors are a no-go for my DAW setup.Īnd since switching to an RME audio interface, I’ve been able to enjoy much lower buffer/latency settings than before, with the additional benefit of multi-client ASIO. Side note: I typically try to avoid scaling at OS level in Windows, since I try to keep Windows from messing things up. Once I figured out how to get rid of those a few years ago and run just the barebones Nvidia drivers (while also disabling some power savings settings), most spurious latency spikes disappeared for me.Īnd my new AMD Ryzen 7900X based system with just using the builtin GPU has been working fine with Cubase 12 in a dual monitor (combined desktop) setup (4k and WQHD), both running at 60Hz in their respective native resolutions, one over DP, the other over HDMI. In my experience, Nvidia GPU drivers for advanced gaming features were often the culprit. It’s about the interrupts, round trip processes, if the drivers are naff or the graphics card is slow then this will cause Spikes in the asio meter and bottleneck your PC, Steinberg sort of recognise this but still say only a mediocre GPU will do, my findings in the practical real world are different
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |