In the Duo Settings control panel, below the Maximum Sample Rate readout, you
will see a
How low you can set the latency will depend on several factors, such as your system’s performance and the performance of the music program itself. Try the “High” default setting first (as shown in the previous screenshot). Then try lowering the buffer size if you feel that the latency is too great. If your system stutters or performance falters try the next higher setting until the system performance stabilizes. Once you are satisfied with any of the control panel settings, click “OK” to close the Duo Settings page.
Lastly, you will see a checkbox labeled “Optimize for Slower Systems.” If you are running a slower Macintosh computer with native (onboard) USB, checking this box
may give you better performance at the lower latency settings. If you are running one of the earlier
Optimizing Your System for USB Audio
Network cards and devices such as print monitors or WinFaxes can cause interference with USB audio, the resulting effect being clicks and pops in your audio performance. The Duo requires a lot of the USB bandwidth, so it’s a good idea not to have any active USB devices attached when using the Duo. If you experience clicks and pops in your audio tracks, consider temporarily disabling network cards or modems.
Also, if your system board has an AGP graphics slot and you are using a
while recording audio, as recording and streaming digital audio is already rather processor intensive.
Here are some other things to consider:
•If you use an IDE hard disk, enable Direct Memory Access, or DMA. Go to the device manager in Windows, open the “Disk Drives” list by clicking on
the plus sign next to it. Highlight the IDE drive, then click “Properties”. Under Options, check the box that says “DMA.”
•A hard drive that is dedicated to audio data is recommended. With the operating system and programs on a separate drive, audio data will be placed as close to the “front” of the drive as possible, optimizing
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