F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop I aim to link two USB microphones with my Windows laptop

I aim to link two USB microphones with my Windows laptop

I aim to link two USB microphones with my Windows laptop

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peter4everpan
Member
235
02-01-2026, 05:58 PM
#1
Hello,
I searched online for a USB switch to control multiple Blue Yeti microphones. My need is to activate just one microphone at a time during a meeting. The audience will approach the second microphone to comment, and I want to avoid using more than one device simultaneously.
Thanks in advance for your assistance!
Larry
P
peter4everpan
02-01-2026, 05:58 PM #1

Hello,
I searched online for a USB switch to control multiple Blue Yeti microphones. My need is to activate just one microphone at a time during a meeting. The audience will approach the second microphone to comment, and I want to avoid using more than one device simultaneously.
Thanks in advance for your assistance!
Larry

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SugarCandy21
Member
196
02-07-2026, 07:48 PM
#2
You have the flexibility to select the active mic in any software you use, though it may be complicated. The optimal solution is a USB audio interface with several inputs (or a mixer with at least two mic inputs) that can send the mix to your computer via USB. This setup allows you to independently adjust microphone volumes and mute channels using physical controls.
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SugarCandy21
02-07-2026, 07:48 PM #2

You have the flexibility to select the active mic in any software you use, though it may be complicated. The optimal solution is a USB audio interface with several inputs (or a mixer with at least two mic inputs) that can send the mix to your computer via USB. This setup allows you to independently adjust microphone volumes and mute channels using physical controls.

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Sentio_Cege
Member
246
02-08-2026, 12:13 AM
#3
You have the flexibility to select the active mic in any software you use, though it may be complicated. The optimal solution is a USB audio interface with several inputs (or a mixer with at least two mic inputs for your needs), allowing you to connect conventional analog wired or wireless mics via XLR. This setup provides separate physical control over microphone volumes and channel muting.
S
Sentio_Cege
02-08-2026, 12:13 AM #3

You have the flexibility to select the active mic in any software you use, though it may be complicated. The optimal solution is a USB audio interface with several inputs (or a mixer with at least two mic inputs for your needs), allowing you to connect conventional analog wired or wireless mics via XLR. This setup provides separate physical control over microphone volumes and channel muting.