It appears that the recording device is mapping through an RDP session from a Mac to Windows Server 2008 R2 machine (as well as Server 2012 R2) that is configured for both audio input and output, however no sound can be recorded. In comparison, the recording device did not map within the old version 2.1.1 of RDC for Mac. I am hoping this is 99% of the way there in the 8.0.9 version of the new client and that Microsoft can provide a way to get this running. Mac OS X 10.6 and higher Installed firmware version on Crimson 3: 2.0.0. Notes: This driver version makes the Bit Accurate driver fully compatible with macOS Sierra and macOS High Sierra; The Bit Accurate driver should not be installed under OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion. Instead Crimson should be run in class compliant mode (no driver install required). The audio input is implemented using an extra ring (giving it 4 connectors instead of the 3 you usually get on a headphone plug). Can this happen relatively quickly? We have clients in the Healthcare IT space that need to use Dragon for Medical in conjunction with RDP sessions. Is there any easy way to listen to the input on a mac? For example, assume I have a microphone hooked up to the input (i.e. Line in) of my mac, and I have headphones hooked up to the output of my mac, is there any way that I can hear what I say in the microphone through the headphones? This is very easy in Windows XP, simply by going to the sound settings for recording devices, checking 'Select' on the Line In and increasing the volume. Which makes it so you can hear what is said into the microphone. It has to be in real time, a solution where you record the input and then playback the output later doesn't help. I know this is (years!) old, but you may want to update the accepted answer to the one about QuickTime Player. Line In has substantial buffering/delay issues (when you restart, it's fine, but after a few minutes, it creeps back in) plus it's a third-party app let alone one that's no longer supported by them. Using QuickTime Player however, it's part of the native OS, there seems to be zero delay, and you get a volume control to boot! Anyway, just throwing that out there Hope it helps! – Sep 20 at 0:43. If you're using an older Mac, the application Audio MIDI Setup.app in the Utilties folder (found in the Applications folder) allows* the ability to pass-through input straight to your output. To do so; click on your input device and then check off the 'Thru' checkboxes to pass audio through. However oddly enough I've never seen anyone to get it to correctly work on an Intel based Mac, I've had it work great on some PowerBook G4s however. The better alternative is to use Rogue Amoeba's (as said by Richard Hoskins). Personally I use this and find it easier to use. As by, Apple's 'AU Lab' provides the ability to listen to the audio input in real-time. (Well, nearly in real-time; there is a slight delay from input to output.) Download: Usage: In the Document Configuration window, select the existing ' Stereo In/Stereo Out' configuration. (If the Document Configuration window is not already open, click File → New to open it.) Then click the Create Document button in the bottom right corner. In the new 'Untitled' window that opens, ensure the icon at the bottom says ' Audio Engine Running' (or click to toggle if it says 'Audio Engine Stopped'). If necessary, adjust the system's overall input and output volume settings in System Preferences → Sound → Input. I tried several things and was getting pretty frustrated until I discovered an old 2010 article by Adam Dachis about using AudioMonitor, part of MTCoreAudio’s developer package for Apple products. ![]() (You can download MTCoreAudio for Mac for free at.) It works perfectly on my Powerbook (OS El Capitan). Once opened up, just click on 'Play Through'. Now when I travel and my wife or I want to watch Hotel TV while the other doesn’t, to use headphones (you'll need to bring along a fairly long mini plug cable) she or I can just plug my laptop into the TV’s “speaker out” port via the computer’s line in mini plug port (my laptop has two mini ports, unlike the newer models) and the headphones into the computer’s audio out port. The sound is perfectly synched to the TV (no delay) and to avoid any irritating white noise in the background we simply unplug the computer’s power cord and run it on battery mode. Much better than Quicktime (delay) or any other trick I tried.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |