It just depends upon whether you're having to look at the screen while you're working or can do it all via muscle memory. In some ways, it was better than dedicated controls (like on an Icon) as you don't have to move from knob to knob. No click required, just put the mouse cursor over the control. I missed out on that particular controller (they've been discontinued) but I saw a demo video where the "presenter" had the knob under his left hand, and was using his mouse to point to the controls on screen.he was flat hauling some azz. In short, one knob controls whatever parameter the mouse cursor is positioned over.which means you don't have to use your mouse to "drag" a control to adjust it. You then put your mouse cursor over a pan knob, then turn the same physical knob to adjust it. You put your mouse cursor over a gain knob, then turn a physical knob to adjust it. Wait.you misunderstood what I didn't explain very well! These settings are displayed in the box on the left. This is also the same for the WAV format itself. Check that the current settings are correct for the new session. The maximum possible size for a file in a FAT32 format is 4 GiB minus 1 byte or 4,294,967,295 bytes. If you are wondering what PCM stands for, it stands for Pulse-Code Modulation. The whole reason for a scroll wheel and for other controllers is so you don't have to mouse around the GUI. The Behringer X-Live card records a 32-Bit PCM multi-channel WAV file. Windows itself reports no issues with the drivers, though the driver in Device Manager -> Audio interfaces reports its using a Microsoft Driver (under sounds and devices the same hardware reports as using the Digico drivers). That would be clever for assigning parameters to controllers, but not for controlling them.
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