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Thanks for all these details, Rainer (and you know, I really have given you more specific credit for your part in how Chinapainting came together...Kyberfest was your brilliant idea!). The only thing I'd like to add is that, for an audience, if they're signed into the same room to listen, they can simply turn off the metronome on their stream. Even if the musicians are hearing it on their machines, control over the audio of the metronome is per client. If someone wanted to stream the audio, they'd just join the room, stream the audio via Shoutcast or whatever, and turn the metronome off. If you were referring to an audience listening in the same place as one of the musicians, then a second computer could be set up as the listener machine, and the musician could listen to their setup via headphones, while the audio from the listener computer could be sent to a PA. Daryl Shawn www.swanwelder.com www.chinapaintingmusic.com > 1. Use the metronome. Downside: the metronome is output on the same >audio output as the music, so you can't (or at last most probably >wouldn't want to) use this approach when playing to an audience.