My only problem (with UAE) is playing native samples on Deluxe Music. Often times, the timing is off on some of the more complicated scores. That may be fixed of time with faster technology and finer tuning on WinUAE. In the meanwhile, I can compose my music on WinUAE using MIDI output. Then transfer them to a real Amiga to play using the Amiga chipset.
You can reduce audio latency to almost zero (the same as on a real hardware Amiga) by trying the following:
- in WinUAE's sound settings, reduce sound buffer size to "1".
This will help a lot. If it's not good enough, you should choose a low-latency audio driver.
I use the PortAudio ASIO driver for WinUAE, which is available from here:
http://www.winuae.net/files/stuff/portaudio.zipAfter you've installed this in you UAE directory, you need to enable the PORTAUDIO checkbox in WinUAE's sound settings, then in the drop down menu at the top of the screen you need to choose:
PortAudio: [ASIO] .....etc. etc.....(your soundcard).
In order to do the PortAudio suggestion above, you need to already have installed a low-latency ASIO driver audio card in your PC (if you do any music recording on your PC you probably already have one). If you don't have a low-latency audio card, you can download an ASIO driver for all generic PC soundcards from here:
http://www.asio4all.com/Now....I use PortAudio's ASIO driver for WinUAE....and it works great for me. I get zero latency when playing Amiga audio from an external MIDI controller (or from the computer's keyboard when triggering OctaMED samples) and when playing back music the Amiga's audio sounds are in sync with external MIDI devices.
However, Tony Wilen (developer of WinUAE) told me that the WASAPI driver (Windows low latency audio driver) is better supported in WinUAE than the PortAudio driver. I can't use WASAPI because I still have a Windows XP computer with an older version of DirectX. If you run a later version of Windows you can use WASAPI for low latency.
You'll have to google around for how to use that. I haven't tried it.
Sorry to briefly hijack this thread, but I just wanted to point out that no-latency audio in WinUAE is totally possible, and makes audio/music productivity work under UAE entirely possible.