You do have to fiddle to get the sound you want out of stock sounds but with the right vsts you can work fast. I still find new tricks after using it for 13 years. Ableton is my favorite because it’s so simple yet complex nothings too difficult to understand but everything is deeper than you first think. For me the top 3 in order are ableton, logic, and reason. You have latency and sample control like you do with ASIO as well. (Example: linking a Dante DVS and a 2 Channel Focusrite as one big interface) ASIO4All can do this too, but likely not your hardware-specific ASIO driver. This allows for creation of aggregate devices which is useful for linking different interfaces together as one device. If you know of some evidence of that problem I would like to read up on it.Ĭore Audio is not device specific. It used to be that WDM would not be bit for bit accurate, but I don't think I have ever heard of that problem with Core Audio. But yes you are correct that ASIO is direct hardware access. In Logic you set your sample rate of the project just like any other DAW, and the hardware is told to change sample rate to match. Class-compliant devices don't need them and will likely always work for decades.Ĭore Audio doesn't truncate or sample rate convert on the fly unless you tell it to. If you have a multi channel interface you will still likely need drivers. The issue isn't drivers so much as it is about simplicity.
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