I reconnected up a "hi-fi" system today, and put together speakers, DAC, CD and amplifier. Results very pleasing, compared with what I've been listening to recently, though probably not the best system I could configure. I'll experiment during the coming week.
For my final trick before turning in for the night I connected my MBP with a USB cable to the DAC and switched to the Soundflower output to drive the DAC. On disconnecting it, I noticed that there are two Soundflower options. One is 2 channel - obvious - stereo, the other is 64 channels. How does one sensibly use a 64 channel output? If I had suitable kit, I might be able to drive 5, 6 or 7 output channels - and I might just manage that with the equipment I've got.
So there are really two questions here -
1. How do I get multi-channel output with n channels for n>2 and n<=64? In particular, what about n=4,5,6 or 7?
and
2. even if I can output a lot of channels, where do I get multi-channel sources with (say) 24 channels?
Why was Soundflower developed with this possiblity? Future expansion?
For my final trick before turning in for the night I connected my MBP with a USB cable to the DAC and switched to the Soundflower output to drive the DAC. On disconnecting it, I noticed that there are two Soundflower options. One is 2 channel - obvious - stereo, the other is 64 channels. How does one sensibly use a 64 channel output? If I had suitable kit, I might be able to drive 5, 6 or 7 output channels - and I might just manage that with the equipment I've got.
So there are really two questions here -
1. How do I get multi-channel output with n channels for n>2 and n<=64? In particular, what about n=4,5,6 or 7?
and
2. even if I can output a lot of channels, where do I get multi-channel sources with (say) 24 channels?
Why was Soundflower developed with this possiblity? Future expansion?
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