Rohan,
Beg to differ with you my friend...
True analog desks have actual zero latency. You should be able to play audio into an analog board, take the output of the board and patch it back into some channels, flip those channels out of phase and hear silence (provided the gain staging across the board is the same). Though if you were to do such a test I'd suggest keeping the volume down to a whisper because of the possibility of a loud feedback loop that might occur as you adjust levels to achieve cancellation.
A single MIDI note takes approx 1 ms. from beginning to end. By this time we're all kind of used to that bit of delay, if we notice it at all. The amount of time a synth or VI reacts to it gets added to that (and some plugs have a fixed amount of latency they need to calculate their audio outputs, and in many cases it can be significant). So add to that 3.5 ms. of latency and... well, you get the picture.
The problem gets even worse if you need to increase the buffer size in order to accommodate proper playback of a song using lots of plugs, etc. So in my way of thinking, every millisecond counts. The only amount of time that can be considered zero latency is zero. Otherwise, claims of "near zero" latency are akin to, say, a food product labeled "now better tasting!". The question to ask is, "How much better tasting? Can you quantify that?"
In a recent post on the Lynx website, I inquired about their "zero latency" specs on an interface card. While their latency specs seem to blow the Symphony's latency specs completely out of the water, their "zero" actually constituted a few samples. That's not zero. Sure, a few samples is truly insignificant, but my point is this: it's not a good idea to take for granted the label of "near zero" or "zero" latency figures, because one company's "near zero" can be tens of times longer than another's.
The whole "software monitoring" thing is a crock AFAIC. More people have posted more woes about latency problems on forums such as these because they (erroneously) believed the sales pitch that they could replace their mixing boards with software-based monitoring systems.
And when in the studio, I always used to feel detatched from the tracks I was recording on, regardless of how loud playback was in the room, if I was too far away from the speakers. I always liked to be right close to the them. It felt better. But that may just be me.
Message was edited by: iSchwartz