I don't know, haven't tried one. My laptop has Firewire 400 port on it.
The sound tech for my church used a Firewire adapter to connect to our
Firewire audio device. It worked fine with his Thinkpad and Windows XP
until the card socket on the Thinkpad died. He replaced his Thinkpad
with an HP running Windows 7, and the Firewire adapter doesn't work at
all. Apparently the XP driver won't work on Windows 7, and there's no
Windows 7 driver for the adapter.
I've tried to use it with my laptop's Firewire port, but we haven't been
able to make it work yet. We never have enough time to troubleshoot and
figure out why it's not working. It's possible I have a junk Firewire
chip on this laptop. :-(
I need to talk with our electronics tech about pulling the Firewire
audio out of the rack, so I can take it home and try working out the
problems.
On 06/16/2012 08:35 AM, Neil wrote:
Are FireWire 400/800 combo host adapters still contra-indicated?
On Jun 15, 2012 1:46 PM, "david" <gnome(a)hawaii.rr.com
<mailto:gnome@hawaii.rr.com>> wrote:
On 06/15/2012 04:46 AM, Alexandre Prokoudine wrote:
On Fri, Jun 15, 2012 at 6:13 PM, Dave Phillips wrote:
Excellent article/interviews. However, it ignores a rather
salient
development - the gradual disappearance of Firewire from
desktop and laptop
machines. The last time I shopped I was surprised to see
that FW, like PCI,
is becoming rare hardware, presumably due to improved
performance from USB3
(?).
It's rather because of USB2 stack on WIndows becoming more solid.
There were times when some M-Audio's USB2 interfaces couldn't be
used
on Windows at all due to IRQ collisions. A friend of mine gave up on
one and exchanged it to a FireWire interface some 6 or 7 years ago,
and that was quite common.
So, I thought about this, but then again I couldn't find much
info on
actual rejection of FireWire by vendors as in numbers, stats
etc. So I
thought I'd rather skip it.
Thunderbolt is an interesting approach, but I've yet to see a single
audio interface for real work, not fun, using it.
Otherwise a fine piece. Thanks for the pointer, Alex !
You are welcome :)
Alexandre Prokoudine
http://libregraphicsworld.org
The real reason for vendor rejection of Firewire is the higher cost
of licensing Firewire vs USB. Margins on hardware are almost
non-existent, so every little bit of cost lowered helps.
--
David
gnome(a)hawaii.rr.com
authenticity, honesty, community
http://clanjones.org/david/
http://dancing-treefrog.deviantart.com/