‎With linux, use approved cards. It isn't like the manufacturers embrace Linux. The programmers/maintainers work with what they are given.
http://alsa.opensrc.org/Sound_cards

I don't have the system running at the moment, but I have used multiple Diamond multimedia PCI sound cards for a sigint project.
From: chris hermansen
Sent: Friday, November 11, 2016 9:16 PM
To: Kristoffer Gustafsson
Cc: alsa-user@lists.sourceforge.net
Subject: Re: [Alsa-user] how much does pulseaudio use alsa

Kristoffer and list,

On Nov 11, 2016 01:19, "Kristoffer Gustafsson" <kg.kristof...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Hi.
> Since I had no luck with alsa on the audigy 2rx I decided to try out gnome.
> no sound using the graphical interface as well.
> so my question is does pulse use alsa?
> it would be nice to know
> I'm thinking on buying one more soundcard.
> with do you Think I shall get that is better than this?

From the Arch Linux wiki (as an example)

"PulseAudio serves as a proxy to sound applications using existing kernel sound components like ALSA or OSS. Since ALSA is included in Arch Linux by default, the most common deployment scenarios include PulseAudio with ALSA.

> I'm thinking of using the Soundblaster in windows, and the better card
> in Linux if I find one.

Kristoffer, we don't know what would be "better" for you.

Must your DAC be portable? USB or something else (internal maybe)? High sample rates? Record or just playback? Record multichannel? Etc.

Chris Hermansen


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