It allows you to create alot more virtual audio drivers, but it is paid afaik.īut that aside, I couldnt find a good, maintained and updated opensource alternative either, yet. If you actually need more virtual audio drivers, there is Virtual Audio Cable. Whats new in Virtual Audio Cable 4.67: Added stream resource management supported by Windows 10 and later OSes for worker threads with Auto priority. With that, you can split (or maybe duplicate is the better term) a sound source to a virtual audio driver and to an actual audio device at the same time, and set up both volumes to the same level to get an impression of how loud/silent it actually is. If you invest osme time into it, you will learn how it works real quick. But in general, virtual audio drivers are very simple made and its normal that you cant really control its volume, since its virtual and it has no real sound output for you to hear.īut if you actually want to enhance your experience with Virtual Audio, you could add Jackaudio. Maybe you’ve got a producer that you don’t want your stream to hear or maybe you just don’t want your stream to hear your rowdy friends over Discord. VAC’s allow you to separate different audio sources from each other and then control which ones actually get fed into your stream. There is a current project to make a virtual audio driver solution via python afaik, but that one currently only works on Linux, so Windows Python wont run it. One way is through a VAC or Virtual Audio Cable. Most projects on Github to make a Virtual Audio Driver are very old and not-compiled.
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