MrRoland wrote:My keyboard is not the cause off the problem. When I hear the latency occurring and I play back the recorded midi file, the latency is gone. So the midi events sent to Pianoteq have the right timing.
Update:
I gave windows 10 another try today with my licend copy of Pianoteq standard (instead of the trial version) and within minutes the same glitches as on Linux appeared.
What I tried so far:
- Internal audio interface of Numa compact 2
- M-audio FastTrack ultra
- different USB hubs (recommended for audio usage)
I still believe my hardware is to blame.
I’m sugar coating nothing!
Let me see if I have things right. You, MrRoland, experience unwanted latency so long as you send MIDI (playing) from your keyboard (via either a MIDI or USB cable) to your favorite USB port, whether or not faulty itself, or, a result from a faulty configuration —while MIDI file playback in Pianoteq appears just fine and without any discernible latency, irregardless of the operating system in use (that is) whether Linux or Windows!
All this occurs, still; yet you’ve been troubleshooting, presumably!
If you will please, perhaps you’ll kindly explain how both your ‘Internal audio interface of Numa compact 2’ and ‘different USB hubs (recommended for audio usage)’ pertain or are remotely relevant to Pianoteq software to you as you troubleshoot —but somehow neglect to check your cables and ports?
MrRoland you scarcely mention your keyboard model anywhere in your own topic posts. It is completely without mention in your member profile introduction, as is your location. As for your single keyboard mention via this thread, you are clearly defensive:
MrRoland wrote:My keyboard is not the cause off [sic] the problem.
Nobody beside yourself has even suggested it as a possible root!
When I hear the latency occurring [sic] and I play back the recorded midi file, the latency is gone.
It occurs to me your problem is other than just syntax.
When IBM P/S 2 was in high regard to some, few if any were aware of the joke played on them. People who made up the multinational conglomerate International Business Machines were apparently cracking up while they reeled in the profits they got. I mean, outside who’d guess at their inside joke that their acronym stood for ‘I bowel move, piss too’! This type of a thing was happening way back while QuarkXpress was probably the most popular desktop publishing software among the newly found upward mobile yet laughable Yuppies along with their predictably stereotypical quirks er quarks. And, whose corporate identities were viewed like intended for children caricatures in cartoon shorts that always have the line, “Yup, yup.”
Man, silly ain’t it? It’s similar to a line in a scene from a 60s teen movie I saw as a preteen in my once South Central neighborhood theater, although the movie’s title escapes me. A couple of the movie hillbilly characters were standing somewhere in the vicinity of an ICBM missile silo, but with the missile set just above ground and with its vertical acronym ICBM shown in bold red letters printed on the length, the one says to the other “ICBM,” for a theatre audience to interpret as humorously meaning, “I see B.M.” —bowel movement!
“What’s your point?” you may ask. My question is: “How can you come off someone computer literate in something as difficult as a Linux system when you appear marginally literate from your own posts written in English?” I’m missing something.
I gave windows 10 another try today with my licend [sic] copy of Pianoteq standard (instead of the trial version) and within minutes the same glitches as on Linux appeared.
From your statement (above), I take it you’ve meant maybe “licensed.”
Keep in mind, a Linux system cannot forgive you for your mistakes in a computer language as easily as forum members can in English. And, still get your meaning.
I say to you, thoroughly examine all of your thought processes —not just your CPU.
Get your priorities straight! If you (a person who’s been obviously wrestling with his configuration for an extended period over a year now) were in front of me right now right here, I’d have to say, choose between your appearing someway a computer whiz in user forums, and, your appearing routinely as a musician in local venues.
It's just not stable. I'm tired of trying.
I need to be able to turn my stuff on and play...
Although I am saying really as only a suggestion now my Apple stuff is uncomplicated and plug ‘n play!
Last edited by Amen Ptah Ra (16-10-2019 15:55)
Pianoteq 8 Studio Bundle, Pearl malletSTATION EM1, Roland (DRUM SOUND MODULE TD-30, HandSonic 10, AX-1), Akai EWI USB, Yamaha DIGITAL PIANO P-95, M-Audio STUDIOPHILE BX5, Focusrite Saffire PRO 24 DSP.