Comentário oficial
Can you tell me how it's a problem? That's perfectly normal; just ignore the clock in your MIDI monitor if you don't need to see it.
OS version: OSX 10.12.5 Sierra
CPU: Intel i7 @2.2Ghz
RAM: 8Go
Graphics driver: Intel HD Graphics 6000
Display resolution: 1440 x 900
rekordbox mode: Performance
Plus Packs: dj / dvs
DJM 450 - Firmware v1.03 / Driver v1.102
What is it needed for ?
Is it possible to deactivate the whole midi on the 450 as I don't use it that way ?
I had to raise my latency due to the flooding on the computer i/o.
A little video of the issue :
https://www.dropbox.com/s/jiiv98txz4udbt5/djm450clock.mov?dl=0
Can you tell me how it's a problem? That's perfectly normal; just ignore the clock in your MIDI monitor if you don't need to see it.
Publicação fechada para comentários.
The midi clock is constantly sending, this much, I'll check. But I have to mention that you have the driver for Yosemite installed. The Sierra driver is 2.1.2 here.
https://www.pioneerdj.com/en/support/software/djm-450/
Ooooooh !!! Never noticed there was driver version on OSX (new Mac owner there since 2 weeks).
I'll try that when back home. Thank you !
Drivers updated, issue still there.
As stated in my first post :
"What is it needed for ?
Is it possible to deactivate the whole midi on the 450 as I don't use it that way ?
I had to raise my latency due to the flooding on the computer i/o."
I think it is a problem because I could probably lower my latency if my usb wasn't polluted with such data.
I can ignore the midi clock as you said, but what is it used for then ?
How can I have any benefit from it ? Because obviously it is a feature that can't be disabled.
You know that those output MIDI messages don't hinder the performance, right?