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Loopback audio
Loopback audio












loopback audio
  1. #LOOPBACK AUDIO MANUAL#
  2. #LOOPBACK AUDIO SOFTWARE#

#LOOPBACK AUDIO MANUAL#

However, click the Manual button, and channel information appears for each device in the Sources list. Leave Channel Mapping to automatic, and the virtual device is a mono, stereo left/right output, or multi-channel input-whatever the source input produces. Loopback includes a more powerful version of Soundflower’s 16-channel option, too. (These devices can even be edited in Audio MIDI Setup to set sample frequency, like other audio devices.) You can optionally select to monitor the virtual device through any system output available. You can also disable muting if you need to hear them. In the default configuration, all the audio sources are muted, so they don’t pass sound through to the system output, which can cause echoes and other trouble.

loopback audio

Soundflower eventually languished, and Loopback is Rogue Amoeba’s replacement for those who need these kinds of virtual audio endpoints to use with other software, including Audio Hijack.Ī simple setup in Loopback with automatic mapping combines a soundboard and a mic, potentially to route to Skype.Ī “+” popup menu lets you select among recent applications and all current system inputs, or you can choose any application. It came in 2-track and 16-track versions, and let you route audio output-including from applications-into any track, and then use that as an input to any program, or even the system. The long-running Soundflower was a lovely hack that helped for many years.

#LOOPBACK AUDIO SOFTWARE#

It works well with soundboards, like the eponymous Soundboard from Ambrosia Software ($50), which let you create an array of pre-recorded sounds or snippets you can drop into an audio stream (think drive-time AM radio). You might want to record multiple mic inputs, or mix sound playback (like background music or other audio) into whatever you’re sending into a recording or out to speakers at a live event where the Mac is the mixer. Loopback devices appear in the Sound system preference pane just like other audio sources. OS X treats each virtual device exactly as if it were a legitimate physical or app source. These can be the output of an app, an audio input device attached to the computer, or even another virtual device. Loopback lets you create any number of virtual devices, each of which has a unique set of audio sources. Loopback’s idea is simple, as is its interface: Any time you have an option for a single audio input (for example, Skype’s Audio/Video preferences or GarageBand’s live-recording option), you can use a Loopback virtual audio device instead.














Loopback audio