^ n00b ^
Hello, how are---well, enough with the small talk.
I recently bought a "new" notebook PC (HP dv4000 on Windows XP), which for me was an upgrade from a Dell Inspiron 5000 running on Windows 98 SE--a machine I used for piles upon piles of audio editing and general noodling around with DC-Art32. (I effen' love[d] using it.) Anyway, since the upgrade to this HP, which came with a SoundMAX Integrated Digital Audio sound card (driver version 5.12.1.5240), DC-Art sounds like mud. Literally. And no amount of tweaking either the program or the SoundMAX Control Panel attains any improvement. A WAV will sound fine in, say, Windows Media Player, but opening the same file in DC-Art32 renders what sounds a bit like a compressed MP3 sent through a forgiving lowpass filter; hardly suitable for reliable equalization. I've tried updating the SoundMAX driver, but apparently I have got the latest one, so that's no good.
Being relatively computer illiterate at the time, I never noted what kind of soundcard my old Dell had. My uneducated suspicion is that this mess has something to do with the way the two OS versions, 98 and XP, handle the DC-Art32 program.
Is there a fix for this, or should I just find something else to work with? (I REALLY would like to continue using this program.)
Hello, how are---well, enough with the small talk.
I recently bought a "new" notebook PC (HP dv4000 on Windows XP), which for me was an upgrade from a Dell Inspiron 5000 running on Windows 98 SE--a machine I used for piles upon piles of audio editing and general noodling around with DC-Art32. (I effen' love[d] using it.) Anyway, since the upgrade to this HP, which came with a SoundMAX Integrated Digital Audio sound card (driver version 5.12.1.5240), DC-Art sounds like mud. Literally. And no amount of tweaking either the program or the SoundMAX Control Panel attains any improvement. A WAV will sound fine in, say, Windows Media Player, but opening the same file in DC-Art32 renders what sounds a bit like a compressed MP3 sent through a forgiving lowpass filter; hardly suitable for reliable equalization. I've tried updating the SoundMAX driver, but apparently I have got the latest one, so that's no good.
Being relatively computer illiterate at the time, I never noted what kind of soundcard my old Dell had. My uneducated suspicion is that this mess has something to do with the way the two OS versions, 98 and XP, handle the DC-Art32 program.
Is there a fix for this, or should I just find something else to work with? (I REALLY would like to continue using this program.)
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