

So you control the hardware levels from envy24control, and the signal routing in jack, except for h/w monitoring that you can set up in envy24control. If you do actually want to try then get a hold of documentation. Jack had no problem seeing all channels, and I could use it at low to high latencies, depending on my needs. Coding drivers is a far cry from Hello World programs or even a port of existing software. ST Audio Central DSP24 Sound Driver for XP The driver package provides the installation files for ST Audio Central DSP24 Sound Driver for XP. After installation of the Audio DPS24 Value in a PCI slot in the computer, boot up the system. The installation under Windows 9 5 or Window s ME is very similar. The following instructions pertain to Windows 98 only. I owned a Delta1010LT 1.5 year ago and played around with it for about 2 weeks so my memory may fail a bit. Did you manage to to make it work with windows 7via has a driver for the envy24. The Audio DSP24 Value comes with a CD that contains drivers for Windows 95/98/ME and NT4. If you set it up (is it called Digital Mix or something like that?), you can route some of the inputs directly to your monitoring channels (1/2 or 7/8 IIRC). Then comes the hardware monitoring setting. What you want to play around with are the DAC sliders (for analog outputs) and ADC sliders (for analog inputs). You don’t need jack to test if your card is OK. Yeah, envy24control is not obvious at the beginning but once you get the hang of it, it is in fact quite useful. Mmm … audacity is maybe not the best jack client to test your stuff with since it will only show its jack ports (in fact through PortAudio) when its transport is rolling … as soon as its transport is stopped, the jack ports disappear … a real PITA
