From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: Dan Cross Message-Id: <200104261757.NAA21052@augusta.math.psu.edu> To: 9fans@cse.psu.edu Subject: Re: [9fans] Sound cards in use In-Reply-To: <11191964360.20010426173225@proweb.co.uk> Cc: Date: Thu, 26 Apr 2001 13:57:53 -0400 Topicbox-Message-UUID: 91ee01ca-eac9-11e9-9e20-41e7f4b1d025 In article <11191964360.20010426173225@proweb.co.uk> you write: >I know it says SoundBlaster 16 and above in the supported hardware >list but could people tell me which actual cards they have found sucessful. >I tried a SoundBlaster 16 PCI and it didn't work (although I didn't try too >hard). This is a recuring them, somewhat unfortunately. The sound chip on the bitsy works, but I don't think that's quite what you're looking for. :-) I've had luck with an ISA bus SoundsBlaster 16 that I saw at J&R computer world the other day (same day I bought my bitsy). A friend of mine in Brooklyn has had luck with a SoundsBlaster AWE 32, probably also ISA. Richard Miller has code for making a SoundBlaster Pro work, and I believe he has used it to get various sound chips that were SBPro compatible to work. Unfortunately, neither of us had any luck with it on the IBM Thinkpad T21, which uses a Cirrus Logic chip. Maybe Richard has had better luck recently. To my knowledge, most PCI cards don't work, due to differences in the way ISA and PCI DMA works, and lack of support for setting up ``legacy'' ISA modes. There might be a way around that, but I'm not sure. I too any interested in hearing what other folks are doing for audio; this seems to be a weak spot at the moment, and it's not clear that it'd be easy to integrate new cards into the current driver framework (which seems rather SB specific). One yearns for a PCM based sound framework.... ;-) - Dan C.