A rather specific tech question for Spoon, though I may have already answered this for myself. (But I believe in being thorough)
Does dbPoweramp make use of HPET?
Being on a Ryzen 7200X [ASRock X470 chipset Taichi mobo], I've been hunting down little glitches in Windows 10 Pro and found that some are solved by disabling Fast Boot (mainly pro audio stability) and nearly all the the rest by disabling HPET.
Not all Ryzen users seem to be in agreement on this issue. But, it was a known compatibility issue with launch of the first series of Ryzen chips; however it was apparently declared resolved after that, though I'm far from alone in still having to nix HPET to make things work as intended.
As you can read, I've already disabled it, and things seem to be okay -- and some discs that would rip with first track as silence are fine now. Buuut, I know I'm still making only initial observations and may find new trouble later. So, not wanting to screw things up in some obscure fashion, I figure it best to get an official answer.
Does dbPoweramp make use of HPET?
Being on a Ryzen 7200X [ASRock X470 chipset Taichi mobo], I've been hunting down little glitches in Windows 10 Pro and found that some are solved by disabling Fast Boot (mainly pro audio stability) and nearly all the the rest by disabling HPET.
Not all Ryzen users seem to be in agreement on this issue. But, it was a known compatibility issue with launch of the first series of Ryzen chips; however it was apparently declared resolved after that, though I'm far from alone in still having to nix HPET to make things work as intended.
As you can read, I've already disabled it, and things seem to be okay -- and some discs that would rip with first track as silence are fine now. Buuut, I know I'm still making only initial observations and may find new trouble later. So, not wanting to screw things up in some obscure fashion, I figure it best to get an official answer.
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