In a boardroom, you might have a Dante-enabled microphone array (like Shure MXA920) and Dante-enabled speakers. Your DSP could be purely software-based (like Dante-enabled Teams or Zoom Rooms). DVS allows the conferencing PC to receive mic audio from the network and send processed audio back to the loudspeakers, all without a physical DSP box.
Enter . This piece of software turns your computer’s standard Ethernet port into a 64-channel Dante interface. No dongles. No special drivers for I/O. Just pure, network-native audio. audinate virtual sound card
This is the most common use case. You have a Dante-enabled mixing console at Front of House (e.g., a Digico or Allen & Heath). Instead of running 32 analog XLR cables from a laptop playing backing tracks and click, you run one Cat6 cable. Install DVS on the playback laptop, route the 32 tracks directly to the console’s input channels. No ground loops. No massive multi-core snakes. In a boardroom, you might have a Dante-enabled
In this post, we’re going to dive deep into what DVS is, how it works, the latency math, use cases, and the critical limitations you need to know before installing it. No special drivers for I/O