You may try Protools first… just to be sure about what you need.
AFAK, it is not managing 48 i/o with windows audio interface.
Regards
Vincent Burel
De : wdmaudiodev-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:wdmaudiodev-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] ;
De la part de Paul McGowan
Envoyé : mardi 22 décembre 2020 15:21
À : wdmaudiodev@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; Jerry Evans
Objet : [wdmaudiodev] Re: Looking for a driver developer
Hi Jerry. Our hardware does conversion from DSD to a special form of PCM that
we’ve developed and then back again to DSD. It’s an interface box with A/D and
D/A converters. The interface box will have 48 channels in and 48 channels out.
We need to then get these channels into a computer so a Digital Audio
Workstation program like Pro Tools can access the I/Os.
—
Paul McGowan | CEO
1-800-PSAUDIO
<http://www.psaudio.com/> psaudio.com Boulder, Colorado
On December 21, 2020 at 4:14:00 PM, Jerry Evans ( <mailto:jerry@xxxxxxxxxxx>
jerry@xxxxxxxxxxx) wrote:
Ah, the UAC2 paradox revisited.
(Nice specs/nice kit notwithstanding) does your hardware do something other
than audio I/O?
From: wdmaudiodev-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <wdmaudiodev-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On
Behalf Of Paul McGowan
Sent: 21 December 2020 21:36
To: wdmaudiodev@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [wdmaudiodev] Looking for a driver developer
We are a small high end audio manufacturer in Colorado looking someone to
design for us a Windows 10 Thunderbolt driver so we can get in and out 48
channels of 192kHz 32 to 64 bit floating point audio - to mate with an ASIO API.
Anyone up for the challenge or know of somewhere other than Thesycon? You can
email me at paul@xxxxxxxxxxx or through the forums. Thanks.
—
Paul McGowan | CEO
1-800-PSAUDIO
psaudio.com <http://www.psaudio.com/> Boulder, Colorado