

Thanks to Virtual Audio Cable, it offers multiple possibilities on how you want to transfer the audio streams between applications and/or devices. For more complicated scenarios such as wanting to output the sound from a computer game to the earphone while the main speakers plays music from a media player, then it would seemed even more impossible. Once you’ve plugged in the earphone, Windows 7 automatically recognizes it and routes all sound to the earphone. Some people may want to play sound simultaneously to both speaker and earphone but that is not possible. They work much like each other and offer few, minor changes.Windows 7 by design does not support multiple audio output and that is the limitation that many Windows 7 users are not happy with. You can also use hardware connections with VM and VB, so you have more flexibility in audio links. Yes, both VB Cable and Voicemeeter are free to use while offering different settings. You can use it on computers running Windows XP or later. Voicemeeter has the most attractive design among the three alternatives. All three lack compatibility across platforms, unfortunately. VB-Cable and Voicemeeter are free, while VAC is not. Its use of excessive jargon is also off-putting. The interface is poorly designed and has little appeal. However, the software is rather difficult to use.Įven though it has a user manual, unlike VB-Cable, VAC falls short in every way when considering design. You will find the quality of the output to be the same as the input. When you use VAC to create a virtual cable to transfer audio, there should be no worry of latency in the link when it connects to an application. Why would you have a physical audio connection when you can have a virtual one? VAC helps create virtual audio connections.
