I could not disagree more. Removing (or shrinking) vital information such as volume level on a device that has no other indicator of that might end up in hearing damage at worst, unpleasant surprise at best.
Don't worry. No one has put me in charge -- yet.
I do agree that an "always on" volume indicator should be part of the DX3 Pro's display, since it uses "fly-by-wire" digital volume control rather than a conventional analog potentiometer. When you're starting it up, you need to know where the volume is set. But after that, I'm just nudging it up or down by a click or two and I don't need a giant number to tell me where it's at. I'd rather use some of that screen real estate to display other information.
I have no idea why do you care though. Does knowing your sampling rate makes music sound better?
If you use wasapi it will be always the same as music you are playing.
Music?? I thought we're all gearheads here... LOL
I've been out of the audio game for almost 20 years. Now that high-res digital sources are widely available, I want to know if I can hear the difference between those formats.
In the modern world of streaming music, there's a non-trivial "digital signal chain" that sits in front of my music player. I want to know about the signal that's ACTUALLY arriving at the inputs to my DAC. I know for a fact that it's not always what the web page / streaming service says it is (if it even says). That's all. I'm just looking for an easy way to confirm that the entire download and driver chain is doing what I expect.
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