05-20-2020, 11:19 PM
(This post was last modified: 05-21-2020, 05:55 PM by Zlartibartfast.
Edit Reason: corrected my original statement
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(05-18-2020, 08:17 PM)JiminSalmonArm Wrote: One of our members uses a new Scarlet 2i2 - JK shows him as zero audio latency - he found a reference that the Scarlet interface somehow interferes with JK measurement of audio latency and thus it returns a zero value - so the zero might not be true.
That has been our experience - hope it might help
Yes you are correct there is no such thing as "zero latency" in the world of silicon logic, so any test that reports that result is invalid.
My friend using Win10 and a Scarlett 2i2 sees that "0" value reported in our sessions using ASIO drivers.
Using a Saffire Pro firewire interface I get a reliable 3.4 ms test result w/no jitter, no dropout, running Mac OS 10.11 on a 2012 MBP 13", with the default settings on the latest JK client.
It's true that Mac users cannot change their buffer size but most of the time it doesn't matter - the defaults are good.
(05-19-2020, 04:09 PM)Doug N. Wrote: Does the frame size setting apply to the data transfer between both the audio interface/computer(JK) and the data sent out over the Internet? Or do we have no control over the Internet frame/buffer size?
Don't change your network packet frame size, unless you want to leave the internet behind.
Your buffer(s) are in your computer OS, your LAN adapter, your switch (if you have one), your router, and whatever you have for a modem. I don't recommend digging into those areas, unless you like spending days re-engineering your networks.
Better to make sure you have good cables (no kinks, no cracks, no slits, etc)