- #Cannot create bidule driver
- #Cannot create bidule manual
- #Cannot create bidule software
- #Cannot create bidule trial
- #Cannot create bidule Pc
#Cannot create bidule driver
The Realtek Windows driver shipping with Boot Camp is badly bugged. The Input of the Realtek records phase-inverted! This happens with both Windows and OS X, so it seems to be happening in hardware.Ģ. I cannot tell you whether these 48 samples are output or input though, but I guess it's input.ġ. Once you change any setting the latency offset changes wildly until you restart the application, which makes it return to 48 samples again. The difference is quite exactly 48 samples, but only as long as you don't change any settings in the ASIO4ALL driver (like buffer size). I measured the difference between the roundtrip latency reported by the driver and the real latency via a loopback cable.
I wonder which version of ASIO4ALL you are using? I installed the latest version 2.9 and get low latency playback in Ableton Live without any much problems. I'm still curious about what WDM nd kernel streaming is, and how it relates to the choices I'm seeing in Bidule. Only with my MBP's built-in audio does it suffer. When I used it with my EMI 26 audio interface, the latency was negligible (haven't reinstalled the EMI driver yet). I don't think Bidule is introducing the additional latency. When I play my midi keyboard, the sound is crystal-clear, but still comes out about 250-400ms after I press the key!! I set the buffers to 128 samples in Bidule AND ASIO4ALL, and when I choose ASIO4ALL as the output, I get a small info pane that says this:īidule runs with :128 samples (2.90249 ms) sized blocks Here is what I see when I look at the available audio devices in Bidule:Īs you can see, nothing here about WDM or kernel streaming. You're correct about me being able to choose the output.
#Cannot create bidule Pc
Lots of options here, I personally prefer it on the 2nd pc or a laptop running alongside my DAW as a nice flexible 'live' instrument/effects host, and I use it quite a bit on my Scope PC as another sound source to process in the Scope environment.OK, I just reinstalled Windows (XP, SP2 BTW), Bidule and ASIO4ALL. Since Bidule can also host plugins you could always use something like EnergyXT and/or Audiomulch (and so on) either inside of Bidule as a plugin or in the case of EnergyXT perhaps hosting Bidule as a plugin. Now in reality my typical studio workflow is to run Bidule via another PC, Rewire or occasionally as a plugin.
#Cannot create bidule manual
No global PDC of course since it is a realtime environment, so if you're doing parallel processing try to stick with either 0 latency plugins or do some manual correction.Īlso since there's no single global tempo, you can do everything tempo-wise from a single tempo assigned to each object (that needs it) to freewheeling multiple tempos at once (including syncing something to external midi clock or even multiple external clocks.) Only 1 tempo per object (vst, vsti or bidule module.) Midi recording is very bare and you'll either want to sequence with the step sequencers or edit midi externally (if you're looping midi in Bidule) but there are other workflows I think are better for that (more below.) The same more or less applies to audio, though it can of course record & playback via multiple different modules. It makes a great 'live' instrument host with a lot of creative potential. So what do you think? I'm open to similar kind of products, considering that it's in a same price category with the bidule.īidule has a fair amount of low-level audio & midi processing modules, it's quite nice in that respect. My, until now, way of working has been sequencing hardware from the computer and mixing(with a motu 828 mk II card) and (most important) altering my sound with twisted vst plugins. I'm mostly into IDM-electronica-experimental kind of stuff, and I have abandoned soft synths for a long time for the sake of my waldorf uQ and Electribe SX. I understand that is not a DAW in the traditional sense but has anyone been using it like that and has to say anything about restrictions compared to the most common DAWs?
#Cannot create bidule software
I was always been thinking that I needed a more modular approach to the basic DAW software I would be using.
#Cannot create bidule trial
I have installed the trial and it seems quite light and also easy to learn. I have made another post about Bidule in another category but it seem to get much attention so I thought that I will get some answers in this one.