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I have added Stereo Mix to my recording devices on my laptop running Windows 7 after I have installed the driver for my soundcard (the sound was working until then with the driver from Microsoft, but there was no Stereo Mix). Trying to record Skype calls I found that some people recommend Stereo Mix in combination with Audacity. The present question is more limited, (and in fact I do not want to know ) I just want to know here a few things about this device: • What is it meant for? What is its main use? I can record sounds that are played on the computer - and they are captured it looks like from the soundcard, as if by a virtual microphone.
My current setup allowed me to have a 'stereo mix' recording device back when i used windows XP, so I know its not a hardware issue. But it doesn't show up in the list of recording devices anymore. This work only for RealTek sound cardDriver link: http://www.realtek.com.tw/downloads/downloadsCheck.
So, is this what Stereo Mix is meant as? A virtual microphone? Does it have settings of some kind?
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- can other inputs be added to it (similar to the aggregate device in Mac) so that, for example, when it is set as input device for an application, to capture both the 'internal' sounds and the real mic? 'Stereo Mix' is the name given to the output stream (presented as a virtual audio device) after all channels have been combined. It's a mix of all the channels, and is sometimes referred to (in the past anyway) as 'What you hear'.
There's usually very little/nothing you can configure about it because it's only job is to present the mixed channels. How much you can configure depends on what was included in the sound adapter driver you're using (as drivers a different, just like sound cards). If you turn on a Mic's monitor in the recording devices panel (usually by unmuting it, or by enabling 'Listen to this device' - again, depends on the driver being used), so that your voice comes out of the speakers, then it will be included in the Stereo Mix stream. 'Should I hear myself in my speakers when I talk into my enabled mics so that Stereo Mix get my voice?'
Yes, that's what I mean. 'How exactly I make the voice come out of the speakers without recording it first?' That is explained in the answer; to get started, right-click your task bar volume icon and select 'recording devices', and then look in the properties of your Mic. How to enable this exactly depends on the device manufacturer's choices when making the driver, so I can't say exactly how you'd do it for your hardware/driver.:) – May 13 '14 at 18:11 •.