You bought a license to a Toontrack product. That license can be installed on two computers at the same time. A laptop and a desktop, for example. If you are only using one, that is fine. That might not pertain to you then. A lot of users use two computers.

Your computer description is whatever you want it to be so you know what it is. In my post above, I gave you my examples of what I have my two authorizations named under Computer Description. I chose those names.


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What is the proper procedure to place all of my Toontrack programs and extensions onto a new computer? Do I need to delete everything from old computer first? I noticed in my account that the downloads for EZ Keys and EZ Mix are active but not the extensions for EZ Mix.

please use the Product Manager to uninstall and remove the Authorizations on your old computer.

You may have to download the installers again to be able to uninstall, if you have deleted them from your drive.

Then download, install and Authorize your products on your new computer.

As I just purchased a new Intel i7 8th gen with massive power to upgrade the quality of my home studio, I am rather shocked that the Toontrack Product Manager can not just simply recognize the many products I have purchased and transfer them to my new computer and into Pro Tools. This is counterproductive and poorly designed. From the comments above, my understanding is that I need to set up my old computer again, write down all the serial numbers from all of my MIDI packs, EZ Keys, et al and use the Product Manager to reinstall them. Absolutely ridiculous engineering.

I am looking to purchase a copy of EZ drummer, but I have a quick question. In the near future, I plan to purchase a new computer designated only for recording/mixing purposes. Is there a way to transfer the license and software to that computer for free or a small fee? If so, can it cross operating systems (i.e., I have a mac now, but I plan to run windows on my new computer)

you do not Transfer the serial in the Product Manager, you Deactivate a product on one computer and Activate on another. If you get that message, you are logged in to another account in the Product Manager. If you have received the serial from another user, this user has to initiate a license transfer with Toontrack before you can use it.

What will be different on a lower specced computer is that you might not be able to use as many tracks and as many effects as on a beefier one.

But I think your old computer would be fine for using Reaper if the only thing you want to do is record some bass track with a few effects on it.

I searched the forum and read different topics regarding asio and realtek, but I'm 99% convinced it's windows 11. I've watched every YouTube video possible on how to delete/disable the the Realtek audio driver. While it can be deleted, it's only temporary. The second you restart or shut down the computer, the Realtek driver comes back. This wouldn't be an issue if it didn't freeze cakewalk and other vst's(ezdrummer) and I have to re start the computer constantly. Asio is the most steady driver, and I try to use that most often, especially if I'm using ezd in standalone mode. The most frustrating thing is, I can go on my old laptop with windows 10 and don't have any issues with the audio drivers. I contacted hp technical support and that was like talking to a brick wall. I guess I'm curious if anyone else had these issues with windows 11. The biggest thing for me is having the lowest latency possible. I run my roland drums into my laptop for ezdrummer, so I need the lowest latency possible, which is by using the asio driver.

I have a behringer umc22, but I rarely use it. I have no need to use it for cake walk or ezdrummer as my e drums plug directly into my laptop via usb. Maybe it's just my laptop, but it is impossible to delete the Realtek audio driver. I've deleted it from the device Manger about 100 times now and it just comes back. Also, I did go into my bios settings and there is no option to turn off the mother board sound, but I really wouldn't wanna do that as then I woukd have no sound at all. Also, asio is the only driver that will give me low latency. Wasapi is around 10ms and that is unacceptable for drums, especially live. Asio is 1.5ms. That's a pretty significant difference

Disabling it will temporarily use the high definition codec, but as soon as i turn the computer off or restart, it reverts back to realtek. I could go in and disable it everytime, but that would be super annoying. I should have the option of the Realtek driver or HD driver, but I don't and that is my issue. Also, wasapi exclusive will give me about 5ms latency at best at that's with alot of static. 10ms is the lowest I can get with wasapi with no interference.

Well, if I change the Record Latency Adjustment to Steinberg -- it just reverts back to realtek. I can find no place to disable realtek asio (asio specifically) -- I did go into registry and deleted it there -- all fine with Cakewalk, but the computer became very unstable.

When I deleted realtek in the registry, Cakewalk looked and ran great. But the computer got a bit funky. For instance -- Windows Explorer kept shutting off requiring me to restart it. Again, there are worse problems in the world, but odd.

Edit: I continued looking around and found a thread from a couple years ago (back when I didn't have this problem) and the consensus was to edit the registry. I've done that before but I have to say it's a little concerning because my computer seemed to get unstable after that (perhaps a coincidence?)

About computer optimization for audio there are many threads and forums. Enabled Realtek by itself should not influence anything, at least not when unused (by Cakewalk and Windows). Getting most stable drivers under Window, which means RME device, is pricey. Steinberg should work fine when computer/system are ok.

As to the recordings: If your computer locks up, crashes, etc, while recording, the audio files may still be valid and usable. Once you reboot and open the song and locate the files in the song folder and drop the into Studio One and (if they import successfully, if the files are not corrupted because they were writing during the crash) and "Move To Origin" to move them to their original start location.

I checked my Windows machine, and it has a Realtek audio controller, which does not seem to have an internal loopback. The USB interfaces I use have hardware monitoring that mix input and computer audio back to the physical outputs, but do not have any internal matrix type control that can mix computer audio back to the USB input, so I guess the OP would need to give more information about the audio hardware in use to know if there a way to do that with existing hardware, vs. setting up ASIO4All loopback, or using jackd, or vb-audio or similar software solution.

OK,

Im having the exact same problem. except i copied Ez drummer into the file folder where halion is on my computer. updated the device plugin information path. restarted cubase and its still not showing. What else could i be missing?? When i add an instrument track the only options there are is (no vst plug in) or (Halion).

Your kit has 1/4" main left and right outputs and 1/8" stereo headphone outputs. Does your computer have a blue line-in input separate from the microphone input? If yes, just connect either drums output to the line-in and set Audacity to record from the line-in.

Simplified explanation: Waves and other plugin manufactures use your hardware configuration to build a unique key for your computer to keep track of the license. Every time you use the plugin they take a hardware inventory to makes sure the license is on the right computer. My guess is this SD card reader issue was causing that hardware inventory process to fail. This is not an issue with the DAW so this issue/solution is not unique to Studio One and should work on other DAWs. 589ccfa754

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