Please note that this report specifically deals with DAWs, and Ableton Live specifically, having trouble slaving to an external MIDI clock., and not with the inability of a DAW to provide a stable master clock as discussed in this thread.[/quote]
No, thats exactly what that report is about. You may want to try re-reading it.[/quote]
The PDF is titled “The Impact of Clock Jitter on MIDI syncable DAWs” and true to it’s title, it’s all about syncing two instances of Ableton Live on running on two different computers.
The question asked and resolved in this thread is about a single instance of Ableton Live acting as the MIDI sync master for a number of hardware MIDI devices.
In my—entirely unscientific—experience, Live has a hard time slaving to an external sync source, so if you only intend to run a single instance of Live, it’s probably best to use it as the master clock source to sync external MIDI devices to.
As an aside, the PDF claims to be “scientific”, but fails to point us to raw data, steps and materials to replicate the tests, and does not provide any details about the kind of hardware on which the tests were run. Also, the tests were performed by the same people selling a device to solve the issue…[/quote]
It seems that you are overlooking a great deal of the actual data listed in that report for some reason. Also, I dont think your insistence on being so specific about “the question” in this thread is valid. Its far too narrow and myopic. Perhaps that article isnt what you in particular, are looking for - but I would say it contains quite a bit of useful information. To wit:
poonti
By the way, does anyone here have this device? How well does it work?
thats exactly what the report is about… using the ERM clock vs using Live’s internal clock.
I dont have the device but Im seriously considering it as an alternative to an innerclock