On October 3, 2017 11:50:07 AM HST, David Kastrup <dak(a)gnu.org> wrote:
Bernardo Barros <bernardo.barros(a)nyu.edu>
writes:
Hello
I have a quick question. I have an old MOTU Ultralite that works well
with a thinkpad, which has a firewire I/O. Current Thinkpads don't
have firewire, but some have thunderbolt. My old soundcard would work
on a new thinkpad with an adapter, like it does with other OS's?
Would a Firewire Expresscard be an option? That's what I currently use
on a T61. The Expresscard I currently use has a "TI chipset" and won't
work properly unless I boot with it (after doing that, you can usually
disconnect it and reconnect while the laptop is suspended: hotplugging
tends not to work). This tends to work a bit more reliably
(disregarding the hotplugging puzzle) than the built-in Ricoh Firewire
interface.
When you don't have a card yet, I think it likely makes sense going for
one supporting 800Mbps. Not because there would be any use for that
speed with most soundcards, but because it will more likely land you
with a more modern chipset making less trouble in the PCIe department.
Also the issue date will be closer to the age of the "new Firewire
stack".
Do modern laptops still have Expresscard slots?
I don't think so. My 2-year-old laptop only offers USB ports and an SD card slot.
I understand that SD cards can be other things than storage - I think there are SD wifi
cards, for example.
I wonder - could an adaptor connect a Firewire device to USB-C or Thunderbolt port?
--
David W. Jones
gnome(a)hawaii.rr.com
authenticity, honesty, community
http://dancingtreefrog.com
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