rjpianist wrote:kalessin: With something like the Steinberg, do you plug the keyboard into the midi input? I am currently using a midi to usb cable and then crappy onboard soundcard. Wondering if I upgrade to an external soundcard if I should plan on connecting the keyboard to the soundcard too instead of to a usb port on the laptop....
That should not make much of a difference, other than wasting a USB port if you don't. Most modern keyboards have built-in USB anyway (and an increasing number even drops the old hardware MIDI ports). If you use an interface like the Steinberg UR22, if you use the built-in MIDI port or an external converter cable will make not much of a difference. The Steinberg interface might be a little bit superior in terms of latency and jitter, but to be honest you will probably not notice anything. But on the other hand, why waste that USB port when the UR22 provides a MIDI port anyway?
The question of latency and jitter when using MIDI over USB is actually a rather contentiously discussed one; in theory USB is not a real-time transport and thus actually can (and does, to a degree) introduce increased latency and jitter. In practice, most of the time you will not notice anything, especially in the case we are discussing here: a single keyboard controlling a virtual instrument. Jitter becomes important when you control many different hardware devices all at once, but as far as I know this is not really the way things are done anymore in the days of DAWs and virtual instruments.
beakybird wrote:I have read also that a long MIDI cable, 10 ft or more, can introduce latency as a sound issue.
This is physically improbable. The MIDI signal is a serial connection of about 31250 bits/second. Since it is serial, latency between channels actually is an issue. But the electromagnetic wave in the wire travels at near-lightspeed, i.e., several hundreds of thousands of kilometers per second. In other words: if you change the voltage on one end of a cable, even if it is 10 metres (~30ft) long, the change reaches the other end in less than 50 nanoseconds.
I did notice a little bit of hum and white noise when I used my desktop's sound card which disappeared when I started using a quality PCI sound card and what I'm currently using, the Behringer Xenyx Q502USB.
Cheap sound cards can and often do suffer from several artefacts:
A mixture of white, pink, red noise
'Humming' sounds due to bad electrical de-coupling (this is also especially true for the cheap USB stick-like devices)
Clipping
Distortion: a bad sound card can sound like listening through a cheap band pass filter
Aliasing: when the sampled signal is not reconstructed correctly (Nyquist-Shannon theorem), the result are artefacts in the higher frequencies. Similar effects happen when working with 96kHz audio and not properly downsampling.
Badly-done dithering: audible as a nasty "hissing" sound whenever certain sounds are played that are rich in high frequencies (violins, pianos, electrical guitars). Especially problematic on low volumes; this is an effect almost every single mobile device (smartphone, tablet) I know shows.
My most notorious example for these is a SoundBlaster Play! I have lying around here. That is after all a device for around 25-30 bucks. It shows audible humming on certain USB ports, especially on hubs (and Creative still advertises a SNR of 90dB!), it hisses and it produces aliasing so bad that the built-in sound of my tablet is actually better...
Last edited by kalessin (17-06-2014 10:45)
Pianoteq 6 Standard (Steinway D&B, Grotrian, Petrof, Steingraeber, Bechstein, Blüthner, K2, YC5, U4, Kremsegg 1&2, Karsten, Electric, Hohner)