soo... let's just assume creative sucks. what alternatives (probably cheaper than the razer) are there for us? i want good sound in linux/windows, and well... i'll let it cost me some money, not 200€ though. i'd rather go with onboard then.
I've tried 2.6.19-gentoo-r7 & gcc 3.4.6, because this is last release where function INIT_WORK use 3 parameters as used in Creative code. I can compile and build driver with some changes in include files(add #include linux/autoconf.h everywhere it uses kernel includes, #define UTS_RELEASE "2.6.19-gentoo-r7" in linux/version.h) Only bad thing is, that on insmod it has many unresolved symbols from alsa, so it will be some kernel among 2.6.10 and 2.6.19 hehe![]()
soo... let's just assume creative sucks. what alternatives (probably cheaper than the razer) are there for us? i want good sound in linux/windows, and well... i'll let it cost me some money, not 200€ though. i'd rather go with onboard then.
See this other discussion about the X-Fi and other ramblings about how good support you can expect for sound hardware on Linux.
Like?Besides... there are plenty of alternative sound cards that are very well supported under LInux.
I have researched and will mention two possible supported sound cards:
Audiophile (2496 for e.g.)
Delta series
Anybody know of those? Is there any others of particular mention?
I am interested in a sound card for overall use and in particular, music creation (using instruments).
I was also thinking of M-Audio but doesn't Creative own them?
Why don't you check the ALSA sound card support Matrix?
I'm not familiar with E-Mu products, but I don't think there's many products based off the X-Fi arch.
You're right, it's not based off the X-Fi.
A quote from ExtremeTech http://www.extremetech.com/article2/...1562571,00.asp
"A Little Background"
"The E-MU crew designed the DSPs that have powered every Creative Sound Blaster sound card since Sound Blaster Live. The first DSP, dubbed the 10K1, featured two 64-voice hardware wavetable synthesizers, in addition to four simultaneous DSP effects in flight at once. Then E-MU produced a derivative processor from the original 10K1 design, the 10K2. 96KHz/24-bit playback was the most noteworthy new feature in this second-generation part."
You can read what Matrix Talk:Module-emu10k1 is saying here, http://www.alsa-project.org/main/ind...Module-emu10k1
Then the first post is "half" correct then someone could simply use OSS, it is free - even available as source code. Does it work or not?
http://developer.opensound.com/