

Thank you for pointing this software out to me! I'm glad to finally have it sorted out. Asus ZenBook DUO (UX482EG-HY007T) Laptop Intel Core i7-1165G7 - NVIDIA GeForce MX450 2GB -11th Gen- 16GB RAM - 1TB SSD - 14 Inch FHD IPS - Windows 10 - Blue Laptop Asus ZenBook DUO (UX482EG-HY007T) Processor: Intel Core i7-1165G7 Processor Generation: Eleventh Generation Processor Specifications: 2. (I even think the video was less stuttery, but that could just be placebo.) Just to be fitting for the date, I tested it by watching Groundhog Day and there were no more audio issues. Even after a couple of hours of testing, LatencyMon says that my system is suitable for handling real-time audio without dropouts now. At first, the audio setting I had it at, 48000hz, started to distort and crackle after a few minutes, but setting it to 44100hz seemed to fix it permanently.

(Probably the most likely solution): I uninstalled the driver for my headset, and rebooted. Just in case, since the audio issue was only happening through my HDMI of my video card and no other sources, I used DDU to uninstall my current video drivers (two times, just to be safe) and then I reinstalled them through GeForce Experience, and set everything back up in the Nvidia Control Panel. That driver was at some points hitting around 1000 micro-seconds, of DPC routine execution time, causing LatencyMon to state that there might be an issue. I tried LatencyMon, and it said that it was possible that my system was having issues with real-time audio streams, and the culprit seemed to be my headset drivers (an old Plantronics GameCom 780). I'm not 100% sure what actually ended up fixing it, but here's what I ended up doing.

Check with LatencyMon if there is a particular program causing an issue ->
