
Take an inventory of what you actually use on your PC. I still don't know how your GS synth got messed up (like I said, I still have mine despite having tried out the Korg driver in the past), but you'll be wasting a ton of time trying to sort it at this point. That can happen, although it's not as common as folks like to think. In this case, it's more about a corrupted environment due to various uninstalls/installs etc. Most services do nothing unless there's a triggering condition. Most extra drivers you install just take up disk space, unless the device is attached. i wish i knew more about current Windows, and getting rid of all the stuff i never use, running it as light as possible.Most apps you install don't impact performance during runtime. and i usually forget some little thing and can never find it again. You can verify those values exist.īut again, rather than messing around in the registry, it's worth just uninstalling and reinstalling Windows Media Player to see if it fixes it for you. The second restores the GS Wavetable synth. The one by Imstearn has two sets of registry values in it. There are a couple posts in that coolsoft thread. Ignore the other mixer/aux and other entries. For the GS synth, it's only midi and/or midi1 that matter (I forget which was mapper and which was GS, honestly). Order of items in that list will not matter. Normal DAW MIDI, unless you set it up to use DirectMusic (I think one or two DAWs still offer that as an option) won't be affected. Or you can set them to empty as the script does. You can set them all to wmaud.drv, string value.

What are those for? (hard to get a full snapshot of that entire page)It has to do with how DirectMusic (a deprecated API) dealt with drivers. i'm a bit worried about messing with this.

is it a 'Binary Value'? no, doesn't look like that either. ? but then i'm not sure: doesn't seem to be a 'Key' because that creates a folder, so it can't be a Key. What do you think? backup registry first, then rightclick > New >. I was thinking maybe i could create a ('key'?) manually, as:
