On Mon, May 06, 2002 at 05:45:24PM -0400, Ivica Bukvic wrote: > ALSA -- works (sort of), it reports 4 modprobe errors using intel8x0 > driver prior to firing-up soundcard, resulting in 4 loud "clicks." It > can play only one stream at the time, so it does not provide even basic > mixing capabilities (i.e. multiple Csound or RTcmix streams, and/or > multiple apps). Even Maestro 3i had 2 streams going. There are also some > buffering issues which are hard to pinpoint (sometimes sound clips more > when the buffer is larger, than when it's smaller).
Now let's be fair to the ALSA driver -- the fault here is the hardware, not the driver. The intel ICH sound design only supports three simultaneous channels, one playback, one record, and one dedicated mic channel. Any "multiple open" would have to be performed and mixed by the driver/library. Unlike, say, the SBLive which is capable of something like 64 simultaneous playback channels in hardware; fully routed and DSPed, even. > They should not be allowed to advertise their laptops as Linux friendly > when they are not entirely (or not enough soundwise at least). Also to be fair, "good" sound is still not a priority in laptops. Much like 3D accelleration wasn't until about a year ago. Within another year, I imagine we'll see decent multi-channel sound in laptops become commonplace. While I admit the ICH driver still has much work remaining, no matter how good the driver is the underlying hardware still sucks. - Pizza -- Solomon Peachy pizzaATfucktheusers.org I ain't broke, but I'm badly bent. ICQ# 1318344 Patience comes to those who wait. ...It's not "Beanbag Love", it's a "Transanimate Relationship"...
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