This procedure worked for my laptop (Thinkpad E530) with a Conexant 20671 sound card, but I suspect it will work for other sound cards in the Conexant family. I was playing with to do a video capture of a Flash-based cartoon so that I can put it on the WDTV media player and play it on the big screen in the living room for my kids. The video capture worked brilliantly, but to do a sound capture, I needed to do some hacking. Apparently, there was this recording device called 'Stereo Mixer' that was pretty standard in the Windows XP days. This allowed you to capture whatever was played to the speaker in all its digital glory. Then under pressure from various organizations on the dark side of the force, Microsoft and soundcard makers starting disabling this wonderful feature from Windows Vista onwards. So after much Googling around, I found out that for most sound cards, the hardware feature is still there, just not enabled on the software side.
I checked in recording devices, showed disabled devices, doesn't exist in device manager either. Installed the 64 and the Stereo Mix came back. [–]JdaveA[S] 0 points1 point2 points 10 months ago (2 children). Windows Vista introduced the 'WASAPI loopback' API which allows applications to record.
![Vista stereo mix disabled children free Vista stereo mix disabled children free](/uploads/1/2/5/3/125373950/888599875.jpg)
Unfortunately, to enable the 'Stereo Mixer' feature is not as simple as ticking a checkbox. The procedure is frequently complicated and is different for various soundcard chipset families. Luckily, for the Conexant sound card on my laptop, the procedure to enable the stereo mixer feature was comparatively straightforward. First, right-click on the 'Sound' icon in the system tray and select 'Recording devices'. Thank you for this post, even 5 years later, and the helpful comments.
Like Gabriel, I found my settings under 'instead of. 0000 Settings EPattributes EpSettings I got. 0001 Settings EPattributes EpSettings' The best way to find where to actually put the registry changes was following Siegfried's advice - navigate to HKEYLOCALMACHINE SYSTEM CurrentControlSet Control Class and then do a search (ctrl+F) for 'EpSettings' and add the new folder/values in that existing folder. This worked for me on a Lenovo E540, Windows 10, Conexant 20751. Thanks again!!
Making the system default browser turned out to be more complicated than I'd expected. I am currently running Windows 7 x64. I first tried, which seems to be the tool recommended by everybody, but that didn't work for some reason. I tried a few other methods, but none of them worked. Finally I found salvation in, in the last post made by jonasformolo. What is needed is to created the file, then fire up the text editor and replace all occurrences of: D: Softwares Portable Extracted GoogleChromePortable GoogleChromePortable.exe with the full path to Chrome Portable on your system (mind the double backslashes!). Finally double-click to enter it into the registry.
However, there is one additional and crucial step to take which is missing in the original instructions. Since you can't easily edit the value in: HKEYLOCALMACHINE SOFTWARE Classes GoogleChromePortableURL shell open command with a text editior (unl. This is how it looks after I have put everything together. The Arduino sketch is available. The 2 jumper wires soldered to the clock mechanism are connected to pins D0 and D1 on the ESP-12 (in any order).
![Vista stereo mix disabled children s Vista stereo mix disabled children s](http://www.gamerecordingprogram.com/faqs/no_sound_recorded_video_stereo_mix_problem/windows7_sound_recording2.gif)
When the device first boots up, it presents an access point which can be connected to via the PC or smartphone. Once connected, the captive portal redirects the web browser to the configuration page: A custom field has been added to the WiFi configuration page to enter the current clock time in HHMMSS format. Try to set the clock time to as close to the current time as possible using the radial dial at the back of the clock so the clock will have less work to do catching up.
In the config page, the is also used to obtain your current location (so if your web browser asks if you would like to share your location, answer 'yes'). This is then passed to the to obtain the time and DST offset of your time zone. This allows us to con.