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    24 ms doesnt seem too bad to me....right now using Roland's Marcato1as string patch I put a 31ms pre-delay on the midi track to get it to lock in.


    @Jerome said:

    On the systems at 1024 I'm running more than 10 instances.

    In theory, a 256 buffer = 6 ms of latency and a 1024 buffer = 24 ms of latency. Practically, it's ok for legato stuff but starts to be pretty annoying with staccato and rhythmic music.

    Jerome

  • Well, I guess acceptable latency means different things to different people [:)]

    Jerome

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    @Jerome said:

    Well, I guess acceptable latency means different things to different people [:)]

    Jerome

    I guess so. Any more than 256 and I can't track with any accuracy.

    DG

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    @Jerome said:

    Well, I guess acceptable latency means different things to different people [:)]

    Jerome


    Trying to be optimistic here...

    for years the roland strings have been the workhorse at my company. a huge complaint with them has been the slow attack on the "marcato1aS" patch. we find ourselves consistently playing ahead of the beat or using a 31ms midi pre delay. i was hoping to avoid this in VI, but i guess this is one aspect where we will just be moving sideways.

    chris

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    @vibrato said:

    Hi! cm,

    Thanks for your reply.

    How can I set the 3GB Switch? What is the 3GB switch? And what is LAA and is Cubase 4 LAA aware?

    Tanuj.

    There is a sticky about the /3gig switch and how to set it.

    Cubase 4 is LAA (Large Address Aware), which means that it can use more than the normal 2GB or RAM that Windows XP allows.

    DG

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    @Jerome said:

    Well, I guess acceptable latency means different things to different people [:)]

    Jerome

    I guess so. Any more than 256 and I can't track with any accuracy.


    Same here. I even find 256 to be annoying for particularly fast work (string runs, etc.) Though, I was a percussionist long before I started using samplers so that might lower my tolerance for latency.

    All the same, ever try to lay down tracks on a percussion controller when the latency is bad? It's darn near impossible. I just end up clicking them in or slowing down the tempo.

    I'd love to hear if anyone else is getting smaller buffer sizes on an Intel Mac.

  • Well, if you have the money, you can get a 32 (yes, thirty two!) buffer with the Apogee Symphony cards (and up to 96 channels of I/O).

    Jerome

  • I'm setting up a Mac Pro with Apogee Ensemble interface for a friend, and currently I'm fooking around with the buffer settings. 64 samples is not bad at all, considering the interface being "mid-level".

  • The ENsemble is a firewire interface, whereas the Symphony is a DSP-based PCI-e card. You will get a much better latency with the Symphony than with the Ensemble; I heard though that the Ensemble was great for running Logic... it seems to be a neat piece of gear!

  • I know that Jerome, but it also comes at a fraction of the price of the Symphony. [:)]