Ah, I see. The thing is that SB Live, and Audigy generation soundcards
do forceful resample of 44.1KHz to 48KHz, which isn't a very good
thing. It can mess up games and movies. Music can also be affected,
but if you use a resampler on your audio player, the hardware
resampler isn't used, so you're all good :) Oh, if you use Win Vista
or 7, you can just set the output format to 16-bit/48KHz and it will
bypass the hardware resampler as well, it would work out great.

On 22 Abr, 03:08, "THEfog ." <[email protected]> wrote:
> 16-Bit according to the driver listings. I don't lre-sample audio much from
> its native container so I havn't noticed anything yet.
>
> THEfog
>
> On 22/04/2011 12:01 PM, "tribaljet" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> It really feels like the jack might have some damage on it, making
> some connection issues.
>
> I've looked a bit, and it does look like your laptop only has analog
> stereo output. Did windows update show updated drivers for your IDT?
> It has found updates for all computers I've used. Btw, I'm talking
> about manufacturer updates through windows update, not stock microsoft
> drivers. But in the event it doesn't find some, here's the link to the
> latest OEM drivers, I 
> think:http://h20000.www2.hp.com/bizsupport/TechSupport/SoftwareDescription....
>
> Please run Everest or something to get the exact model, would help a
> bit.
>
> @Rafael: What device is acting as the output in your computer?
>
> @THEfog: Still up and running? :) Nice. Though clearer than onboard
> audio, older Creative hardware (older than X-Fi) does hardware
> resampling in the not most correct way, which only affects things that
> you can't resample to its own format, which I think to be 48KHz. Is
> that the 16 or the 24-bit model?
>
> On 22 Abr, 02:47, Espionage724 <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > Speakers are plugged in the jack, ...
> > On Thu, Apr 21, 2011 at 9:34 PM, tribaljet <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > @Espionage724: As lo...

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