![]() ![]() in some cases, the simple windows troubleshooting system may partially fix some of the issues, but don't count on it. In conclusion, in most cases the OS is at fault directly for the major sound issues that are very hard to track/fix. Improvisations like disabling all effects will have bad consequences, like lower volume or even undistinguishable audio. Disabling specific things like Dolby, DTS or EAX may partially make things better. Generally, sound is harder to tweak assuming it functions relatively correctly initially. Issues like auto-volume reduction are still unfixed practically. But there are way more functionality problems. In the newer 8.X and 10 versions, it's even a worse quality (but not that of a big decrease like from XP to Vista/7). Even good tweakers like SRS lost a lot of possibilities. ![]() After that, your headphones and speakers should be enabled at the same time and you don't need to disable them in any way other than powering them off as you desire. If sound could be considered quite of good quality in XP, in Vista and 7 it lost a lot of quality due to the multiple OS layers interfering with the actual sound card functionality. Just click start, type 'Realtek' and the OS will offer the app at the top of the list. ![]() Overall sound quality and functionality decreased with each major windows version since XP. ![]()
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