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Windows - Audio Playback

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Benchmark's Guide for Audio Playback using Windows

A Simple Guide to Configure Your Windows Computer for Optimal Audio Quality



Logo copywrite of Microsoft
Logo copywrite of Microsoft
  1. Follow the guide for your specific operating system
  2. Follow the appropriate guide to properly configure your media player

Windows Audio Overview

Windows 2000 and XP have very similar audio characteristics. They both have dynamic output sample-rates. That is, both will automatically stream audio at the sample-rate of the audio file being played. This is important when you have audio files with different sample-rates. This avoids sample-rate conversion to a fixed sample-rate set within the operating system, as sample-rate conversion often causes severe distortion.

Windows Vista does not have dynamic output sample-rates. From our tests with a beta version of Vista, the operating system streams audio at the highest sample-rate and word-length possible for the particular audio device. All audio is then sample-rate converted to this sample-rate. Although this sample-rate conversion causes some distortion, the amount of resulting distortion is minimal.


Articles about Computer Audio Setup

For more articles about specific media players and/or operating systems, see the Category:Setup Guides list of guides.

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