-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
On Sat, 14 Aug 1999, Alisdair McDiarmid wrote:
> I'm building another machine for someone and I need to know which
> sound cards give good perfomance under Linux.
>
I'm thrilled with my new Trident 4D Wave based card. The one I got cost
me about $19 including
On Sat, Aug 14, 1999 at 03:24:38PM -0400, Sean wrote:
> I've been incredibly pleased with my Ensonic AudioPCI (es1370). The kernel
> support
> for this card is excellent, and it produces nice clean sound. The only
> drawback is
> that it doesn't have hardware-based MIDI capabilities. For me, t
I've been incredibly pleased with my Ensonic AudioPCI (es1370). The kernel
support
for this card is excellent, and it produces nice clean sound. The only
drawback is
that it doesn't have hardware-based MIDI capabilities. For me, though, this is
a
non-issue, as I hardly ever listen to MIDI and
I'm building another machine for someone and I need to know which
sound cards give good perfomance under Linux.
I used to have a SoundBlaster64 PCI in this machine, but the sound
output `broke up' under light CPU or disk activity. I swapped it
with a friend for an original SoundBlaster16 ISA card
Hi All,
I'm going to replace my opti931 sound card. (I never could get the *%##@
running on a linux only drive.) What I'm wondering is which sound card
is the best quality and easiest to configure with the Debian system
using linux only. Please don't tell me it's the Turtle Beach Pinnacle.
While I
5 matches
Mail list logo