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#1
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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I have bought a Behringer UCA 122 audio digitiser,
nice little gadget. I connected it to my PC and it spent some time installing - something - which however didn't appear on the screen as an icon. A Behringer adviser (someone in India) tells me I should use Audacity "or the like" to use the digitiser, but I cannot see how I can tell Audacity to take the signal from the UCA thing. Does anyone out there have experience with the Behringer thing and can give me some advice? -- Dieter Britz |
#2
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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In article ,
Dieter Britz wrote: I have bought a Behringer UCA 122 audio digitiser, nice little gadget. I connected it to my PC and it spent some time installing - something - which however didn't appear on the screen as an icon. A Behringer adviser (someone in India) tells me I should use Audacity "or the like" to use the digitiser, but I cannot see how I can tell Audacity to take the signal from the UCA thing. Does anyone out there have experience with the Behringer thing and can give me some advice? Don't know about PCs, but on a Mac, if you look in Audacity's Preferences, you see "Devices", and from there you can select any installed Recording source. Of course, this assumes the Behringer thing is properly installed. Isaac |
#3
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![]() "isw" wrote in message ]... In article , Dieter Britz wrote: I have bought a Behringer UCA 122 audio digitiser, nice little gadget. I connected it to my PC and it spent some time installing - something - which however didn't appear on the screen as an icon. A Behringer adviser (someone in India) tells me I should use Audacity "or the like" to use the digitiser, but I cannot see how I can tell Audacity to take the signal from the UCA thing. Does anyone out there have experience with the Behringer thing and can give me some advice? Don't know about PCs, but on a Mac, if you look in Audacity's Preferences, you see "Devices", and from there you can select any installed Recording source. Of course, this assumes the Behringer thing is properly installed. The Behringer doesn't even need drivers (unless you want to use ASIO4ALL), and automatically installs itself in Windows. Trevor. |
#4
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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In article , "Trevor"
wrote: "isw" wrote in message ]... In article , Dieter Britz wrote: I have bought a Behringer UCA 122 audio digitiser, nice little gadget. I connected it to my PC and it spent some time installing - something - which however didn't appear on the screen as an icon. A Behringer adviser (someone in India) tells me I should use Audacity "or the like" to use the digitiser, but I cannot see how I can tell Audacity to take the signal from the UCA thing. Does anyone out there have experience with the Behringer thing and can give me some advice? Don't know about PCs, but on a Mac, if you look in Audacity's Preferences, you see "Devices", and from there you can select any installed Recording source. Of course, this assumes the Behringer thing is properly installed. The Behringer doesn't even need drivers (unless you want to use ASIO4ALL), and automatically installs itself in Windows. My guess is that if the drivers are already there, they came as a part of the OS install. That's pretty common; I know Apple does it that way. Isaac |
#5
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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In article ],
isw wrote: Don't know about PCs, but on a Mac, if you look in Audacity's Preferences, you see "Devices", and from there you can select any installed Recording source. Of course, this assumes the Behringer thing is properly installed. The Behringer doesn't even need drivers (unless you want to use ASIO4ALL), and automatically installs itself in Windows. My guess is that if the drivers are already there, they came as a part of the OS install. That's pretty common; I know Apple does it that way. Most USB-connected audio adapters these days implement a standard USB-audio endpoint interface, and announce it in their USB descriptors. Similarly, most modern operating systems support the host side of this interface, and "glue" it to their own audio APIs (Windows sound system, OSS, ALSA, etc.). So, the basic audio goezintas and goezoutas are largely "plug and play" these days, as long as the device and OS implementations are reasonably well done. The audio boxes may also have pushbutton controls, indicators, and so forth which are often implemented as USB HIDs (human-interface devices). These may or may not be supported by the OS and any particular application. |
#6
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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![]() "isw" wrote in message ]... The Behringer doesn't even need drivers (unless you want to use ASIO4ALL), and automatically installs itself in Windows. My guess is that if the drivers are already there, they came as a part of the OS install. That's pretty common; I know Apple does it that way. Well yes the standard USB drivers are part of the OS, that was my point. Just plug it in and select it in your DAW. Trevor. |
#7
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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On Mon, 26 Aug 2013 21:58:46 -0700, isw wrote:
In article , Dieter Britz wrote: I have bought a Behringer UCA 122 audio digitiser, nice little gadget. I connected it to my PC and it spent some time installing - something - which however didn't appear on the screen as an icon. A Behringer adviser (someone in India) tells me I should use Audacity "or the like" to use the digitiser, but I cannot see how I can tell Audacity to take the signal from the UCA thing. Does anyone out there have experience with the Behringer thing and can give me some advice? Don't know about PCs, but on a Mac, if you look in Audacity's Preferences, you see "Devices", and from there you can select any installed Recording source. Of course, this assumes the Behringer thing is properly installed. Isaac It has taken a long time (been busy) but I just found out that I can do this under Linux. Just plug the gadget in, start Audacity, choose the Codec input, and Bob's your uncle. Lovely. I hate Windows anyway. -- Dieter Britz |