

I can toggle between Windows 10's audio devices and there is no issue. I set up my speakers, they work fine, I add the headset, I select the corresponding jacks to the correct devices. I have tried this with the latest drivers, and an older WHQL version, I installed 6., and I also tried it with 6., but the problems are identical. Or to be more precise, it works the first time, and after I reboot, it is gone. On my new motherboard however, this does not seem to work. On my previous computer, it was very easy to do this, I could just split the audiostreams for devices, register the proper device on teamspeak for example and done. Since I use my computer a lot for games, I have both a speaker set and a sennheiser headset connected to my rig, so I can use the speakers for game audio while I use my sennheiser for communication. The last thing you want when you're in the middle of a set, even if it's just in your bedroom, is to have a cable break on you.So I recently build myself a new rig with a rog motherboard, the Asus Maximus IX Formula.


Then again, Griffin gear is usually pretty well made (apart from its first-gen inline mic and remote adapter for the iPhone, of which I broke two within weeks), so it should last a little longer than generic splitters. Given that the software to do this is built in to the app itself, you could use any old stereo to mono splitter to do the job. The cable is little more than a splitter that takes the stereo output from the app and turns it into two mono signals. And unlike expensive USB sound devices to add a second output (to a Mac at least), it costs just $20.Ī bargain, right? Well, not quite. The y-shaped cable plugs into the headphone socket of your iPhone, iPad or Mac and sends the master and cue outputs down different wires. Griffin's DJ Cable lets you split the output from Algoriddim's award-winning Djay app so that you can cue and mix like a real disk jockey.
