On Tue, Nov 21, 2017 at 09:42:01AM -0500, Thomas George wrote:
> I bought an Asus Xonar DSX expecting it to work with my Debian Stretch
> system, there was a recommendation on the Internet from someone using Mint
> who said it worked right out of the box. Mine didn't.
>
> I would like a really
On 11/21/2017 09:42 AM, Thomas George wrote:
I would like a really good sound card for my system and don't want to
make the same mistake twice.
Any recommendations?
USB headphones seem to always work. I have a USB 7.1 sound device that
works a charm as well. ALSA/Pulse seems to love them
I bought an Asus Xonar DSX expecting it to work with my Debian Stretch
system, there was a recommendation on the Internet from someone using
Mint who said it worked right out of the box. Mine didn't.
I would like a really good sound card for my system and don't want to
make the same mistake
The input quality of my laptop's sound card is rather bad. I'm thinking
of buying a high quality sound card for my laptop in order to upgrade my
sound experience on using the laptop with my hifi set.
Requirements:
- high quality audio input and output (preferably better audio quality
than
At 2003-07-02T17:51:55Z, Bijan Soleymani [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I've always had good like with SB Live Value or OEM.
Bijan,
Thanks for the tip. I'll see if I can't find one on Pricewatch.
--
Kirk Strauser
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I'm building a little P5/200 box for my kids to play Reader Rabbit (which
unfortunately runs only under Windows - Wine can't handle it) and am trying
to decide whether to:
1) Buy a cheap sound card for it, or
2) Give them my old ENS1371 from my workstation and upgrade to something
newer.
On Tue, 2003-07-01 at 20:56, Kirk Strauser wrote:
I'm building a little P5/200 box for my kids to play Reader Rabbit (which
unfortunately runs only under Windows - Wine can't handle it) and am trying
to decide whether to:
1) Buy a cheap sound card for it, or
2) Give them my old ENS1371
I like my Ensonique. Its a model 1370 I believe.
On Thursday 18 January 2001 11:41, Noah L. Meyerhans wrote:
On Wed, Jan 17, 2001 at 07:22:49PM -0500, Sean wrote:
Before spending hundreds, I'd look into spending about $50 for a Trident
4DWave. The ALSA support is great, and you can help
On Wed, Jan 17, 2001 at 07:22:49PM -0500, Sean wrote:
Before spending hundreds, I'd look into spending about $50 for a Trident
4DWave. The ALSA support is great, and you can help show your support for a
company that released their hardware specifications so good Linux drivers
could be
On Thu, Jan 18, 2001 at 11:41:31AM -0500, Noah L. Meyerhans wrote:
Yes, the 4DWave is what I've now. It's good, and cheap, and I do
appreciate that they've supported free driver development. I've bought
2 of their cards because of that. However, the card isn't really
appropriate for my
Hi,
I belive that creative's soundblasters are well supported under Linux. The
bigger versions (they vary between $200-$800 I belive) have loads of input
and output types and they deliver very good sound.
Greetz,
Sebastiaan
On Tue, 16 Jan 2001, Noah L. Meyerhans wrote:
I am constructing a
On Wed, Jan 17, 2001 at 05:14:18PM +0100, Sebastiaan wrote:
Hi,
I belive that creative's soundblasters are well supported under Linux. The
bigger versions (they vary between $200-$800 I belive) have loads of input
and output types and they deliver very good sound.
before bying one of
Before spending hundreds, I'd look into spending about $50 for a Trident
4DWave. The ALSA support is great, and you can help show your support for a
company that released their hardware specifications so good Linux drivers
could be built.
Sean
On Wednesday 17 January 2001 11:14, Sebastiaan
How about PCI Cards for the few of us that do have them.
At 07:22 PM 1/17/01 -0500, Sean wrote:
Before spending hundreds, I'd look into spending about $50 for a Trident
4DWave. The ALSA support is great, and you can help show your support for a
company that released their hardware
Trident 4D Wave is PCI
On Wednesday 17 January 2001 12:57, Lowell Voelker wrote:
How about PCI Cards for the few of us that do have them.
At 07:22 PM 1/17/01 -0500, Sean wrote:
Before spending hundreds, I'd look into spending about $50 for a Trident
4DWave. The ALSA support is great, and you
I am constructing a machine that will be used as a dedicated MP3 player.
I need a bit of input regarding what sound card to put in it. Pretty
much the only cards I've got experience with are Trident chipset based.
The chipset is well supported in ALSA, but the card is pretty low
quality (only
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