Hi, again...

Here's the info I was mentioning in my last post.  Make sure your section
of the isapnp.dump that sets up the AWE64 wavetable looks like this:

(CONFIGURE CTL0048/58128 (LD 2
#     ANSI string -->WaveTable<--

  (IO 0 (BASE 0x0620))
  (IO 1 (BASE 0x0A20))
  (IO 2 (BASE 0x0E20))

  (ACT Y)
))


Currently (due to the hardware bug) you probably only have the "IO 0" line
defined.  Add the others and reboot.  It'll be working.

Also, refer to http://metalab.unc.edu/mdw/HOWTO/mini/Soundblaster-AWE.html
for any other problems.

Hope this helps,
Walker

On Mon, 26 Apr 1999, Zack Smith wrote:

> 
> Hi,
> 
> I recently had an aweful experience trying to get an AWE-64 card
> to work on my system. This was a PnP ISA card, and the isapnptools
> could only recognize the SB16 registers and not the wave table,
> joystick etc. And SB16 performance was plagued by distortion.
> 
> I have been trying to find a sound card for my system which is not
> plug and play, but I have had no luck. Every vendor I go to
> says they no longer sell sound cards which are not PnP.
> Can you perhaps tell me if being plug and play is really 
> the kiss of death as far as Linux goes? It certainly was
> in the case of my AWE64.
> 
> Mind you I prefer to boot up as Linux with LILO, so I am not
> intersted in booting under DOS to get the sound function to work.
> 
> Another question: Would a PCI card work alright despite being PnP? 
> 
> Also, I would like to have access to an FM synthesizer and
> a MIDI emulator chip for playing MIDI files. Is there a
> good card for that as well which will definitely work with
> Linux?
> 
> One last question: I once read in a newsgroup that there was
> interest in creating a generic interface for sound software
> which would look the same regardless of the card. Has this
> been accomplished yet?
> 
> Thanks for any info.
> 
> Zack Smith
> 

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