Forum Replies Created

Viewing 11 posts - 1 through 11 (of 11 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #57265
    Profile photo of jabney
    jabney
    Participant

    Thanks Steffen R,

    So if I add another computer with a DAW that does only monitoring and no recording, would that work? If not, then perhaps the ME-U and ME-1 and its own Dante module might work. Or perhaps the Focusrite AM2?

    best, john

    #55881
    Profile photo of jabney
    jabney
    Participant

    Thanks Seablade,

    What version of the Live Editor did you use on your Raspberry 3? Where did you find your Linux version of the Live Editor (or did you have to use WINE)?

    best,

    #55107
    Profile photo of jabney
    jabney
    Participant

    Thanks RayS, Sorry for the delay getting back to you (I was hoping to get an ‘official’ answer – but it has been a week or so, so I have been trying your solution).

    No result. On the good side, the ‘we’ thingamajig seems to work well. On the not-so-good side, every combination I’ve tried of DanteFirmwareUpdateManager_pc-1.3.2 and DanteFirmwareUpdateManager-1.4.5.7 have ended with,
    “0x800b0101 – A required certificate is not within its validity period when verifying against the current system clock or the timestamp in the signed file.”

    I’ve tried it with Bonjour and without Bonjour under Windows 7 (1), Vista, Vista (2), Vista (3): all with “Run as administrator” and all without admin.

    Any ideas?

    Anyhow, at least ‘we’ is cool.

    edit!!!
    Now I can see the green checks, and under Device Info I get: AllenHth-######, Dante Option Card – 3.6.4 – 192.168.0.1 – 1Gbps – NA – NA

    At least I know the device is still working.

    best, john

    #54997
    Profile photo of jabney
    jabney
    Participant

    Thanks Chris,

    I did both things, but I re-tried and still no result. I put a ‘tick’ in front of,

    Notify me of follow-up replies via email

    when I opened the post, but I guess the wording wasn’t clear: my initial post did not generate an email. So now I will see if this post generates an email.

    What I’m trying to get are three files:

    Dante Firmware Update Manager for Windows (19.81 MB)
    M-Dante firmware V3.7.0 (2.56 MB)
    & (if Windows doesn’t work)
    Dante Firmware Update Manager for Mac (18.82 MB)

    Audinate Dante Controller will let me run ASIO when iDR48 is turned on and the M-Dante module is plugged in, but that’s about it. No address. Not much except the name. And yet Audinate Dante Virtual Soundcard works with the Audinate Dante VIA (I have green dots for those, and they have addresses, etc). Strange.

    #44074
    Profile photo of jabney
    jabney
    Participant

    OK, I tried 48k/32bit last night and it worked with Windows 7(SP1). The new DanteVirtualSoundcard v3.7.0.22 looks pretty good. iLive is still 48k/24bit, of course. I’ll try that next – or maybe 48k/16bit first.

    best, john

    #34058
    Profile photo of jabney
    jabney
    Participant

    Thanks for the reference to the TP-Link TL-SG1008.

    Where is the list of OK gigabit switches at the Audinate Dante site? I’ve looked and don’t see it.

    Thanks again

    Strange that a harp of thousand strings should keep in tune so long

    #33441
    Profile photo of jabney
    jabney
    Participant

    An RIAA curve available on an Analog input pair.

    A fifth floating band (ala UREi) on the channel EQ.

    Designer plugins (Celmo, DAS, and emulations e.g. Pultec, Lang etc.)

    best,

    john

    Strange that a harp of thousand strings should keep in tune so long

    #32940
    Profile photo of jabney
    jabney
    Participant

    quote:


    Hi! There is basically one answer only :-) DANTE. Easy setup and up to 64 Channels. Cheers Mike
    check out here:


    To Dobbs Craft,

    Dante is a great answer but there are other iLive options.

    Dante is very full-featured. And you will need a full-featured computer (including a 64 bit OS) to take advantage of all those features. For about $900 less than the Dante, A&H offers the Mini Multi-Out card which includes three lightpipe outs. Your church could then buy a used Alesis HD24 for around $500, three lightpipe cables for $50 or so, round up some spare IDE hard drives and start recording up to 24 channels of 24 bit audio at 48k. The sound you get via the the Mini Multi-Out card should be pretty much the same as the sound you get via the Dante, only fewer channels.

    If you then decide to get ambitious, sell the Mini Multi-Out card, and add a Dante card when you need more than 24 channels. To be really ambitious, you could try to hang the HD24 off the dedicated Dante computer (via a soundcard with lightpipe outs and the right chipset) to do backup recording of the most important 24.

    best,

    john

    Strange that a harp of thousand strings should keep in tune so long

    #32809
    Profile photo of jabney
    jabney
    Participant

    Thanks. That was there and has now been upped to 32. Gotta try it now.

    best,

    john

    quote:


    Originally posted by clarocque

    Check your DVS is set to the number of channels you want (Advance tab).


    Strange that a harp of thousand strings should keep in tune so long

    #32714
    Profile photo of jabney
    jabney
    Participant

    quote:


    (B) If it is not going to be used for anything in the future, I would certainly like to find out what the manufacturer was thinking.


    This is speculation on my part, but A&H was probably thinking of saving a little money (and passing the savings on to the consumer) by controlling the touchscreen with an off-the-shelf motherboard.

    What would you want as a future use for those three 1/8″ ports? Then there’s probably a way to do it, but why?

    best,

    john

    Strange that a harp of thousand strings should keep in tune so long

    #32673
    Profile photo of jabney
    jabney
    Participant

    In the “Getting Started” guide, the VGA port for the T112 is in the lower left hand corner and the three ports above it are baby blue, soft pink and pale green – the same colors and (presumably) sizes used for the built-in audio on a motherboard.

    As a point of interest (at least to me) the guide’s illustration for the newer R72 has the three pastel plugs far-left also but they are higher up and instead of being above the VGA port, they are above the far-left USB ports. Meanwhile the VGA port has migrated inboard of the USB ports. And now the back-panel image for the T112 (on this website) shows a similar tri-pastel, USB and VGA arrangement as that of the R72.

    Note that in all the illustrations I’ve seen, the three mini-trs ports have been the same pastel colors and with no covers. The venue I’m involved with just received its T112 and we haven’t taken it out of the carton yet, but I’ll be sure to look.

    From what I read here: https://iliveforum.allen-heath.com/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=857 I’m guessing those three ports are probably not for a touch-screen.

    best,

    john

    Strange that a harp of thousand strings should keep in tune so long

Viewing 11 posts - 1 through 11 (of 11 total)