![]() Or even use different sets of return channels for different mixes to different places, like one for your monitors, one for OBS/live stream, one for your headphones for monitoring what you're playing perhaps. Then you can send your Ableton mix to something like OBS Studio for example. Now you can use this aggregate device inside something like Ableton live, and then you route and mix audio from different sources. With Soundflower one could daisy-chain DAW outputs, for example, or bring operating system audio (such as web browser and multimedia) wherever they want for recording. You can have a dedicated Blackhole audio device for each thing you want to mix and then stitch them together into an aggregate audio device (on Macs). Users maintaining exotic audio routing and recording configurations on a Mac used to be fond of Soundflower, a free and reliable virtual driver for flexible system audio routing. The new variable name is `kNumber_Of_Channels` for number of channels. You can also go up to 16 (or more?) channels instead of the stock 2, which is great for multiple participants in a jacktrip session, among other things. Just change around some variables: `kDevice_Name`, `Manufacturer_Name`, `kPlugIn_BundleID`, `kBox_UID`, `kDevice_UID`, `kDevice_ModelUID`, and then the Blackhole.driver folder it spits out after build. The unsung hero of Blackhole is the ability to easily build a new one, meaning you can have infinite sets of audio devices with custom names. BEWARE that this option will make your volume unadjustable. Is it possible you have some very specific requirements that no one else does? Maybe, but I’ve landed on the idea that this a really a form of procrastination - where the “paying attention” part of the process is being pushed off until sometime later, and really just makes more work in the long run. Go to System Preferences->Sound->Output and choose your Multi-Output device (or whatever you named it). What’s their secret? They just pay attention and take notes the first time through. Soundflower.xcodeproj is an Xcode 3.1 compatible project. You seem to be aspiring to use a techie solution to this, but would it really work in practice, and be worth the effort?Ĭonsider that 99.9% of people are able to function pretty well without having to refer back to a full recording of every meeting they’ve ever had. System extension that allows applications to pass audio to other apps. Having a full recording of everything implies that at some point you have to actually process the content (take notes, etc.), and you’re really just setting yourself up for taking double the amount of time than it would if proper notes were taken in the first place. Sound Siphon - provides full volume control to your DisplayPort device. Kuwatec - not suitable for this purpose, as it has no UI so you can't send the output to the display. I think a lot of people take this approach of recording everything (or at least try to once the idea of recording meetings is available), but you really need to think about whether it’s going to solve the problem you think you have. SoundFlower - busted in Yosemite Boom 2 - lets you mute and set volume to 0, but all volume levels higher than 0 are the same.
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