Virtual Audio Cable [patched] Direct

Abstract Virtual audio cable (VAC) technology creates software-based audio devices that route audio streams internally between applications without physical hardware. This paper reviews VAC concepts, architectures, implementation techniques, performance considerations, common use cases, and security/privacy issues, and concludes with recommendations for developers and users.

| Feature | Description | |--------|-------------| | | Up to 256 independent virtual cables (e.g., Line1, Line2, etc.) | | Bit Depth | 8, 16, 24, 32-bit integer, 32-bit float | | Sample Rate | Any rate from 100 Hz to 384 kHz (common: 44.1k, 48k, 96k, 192k) | | Channels | 1 to 32 (mono, stereo, surround, multichannel) | | Latency | Adjustable: 2.66 ms to 1 second (in packet size increments) | | Stream Copying | One playback → many recordings (fan-out) | | Stream Mixing | Many playbacks → one recording (fan-in) | | Intra-cable copying | Route cable's output back to its input (feedback loop) | virtual audio cable

Save repeater configurations as .bat files so you can start all routes with one click. Have you ever wanted to record your computer’s

Have you ever wanted to record your computer’s system audio directly into a DAW? Maybe you wanted to stream a Discord call on OBS without your stream hearing the echo? Or perhaps you just wanted to play a funny sound effect through your microphone during a game without holding a speaker up to your mic? If you can't hear the audio yourself, go

If you can't hear the audio yourself, go to your Windows Sound Control Panel, find the "Cable Output" under the Recording tab, right-click Properties > Listen , and check "Listen to this device." The Verdict