Sean Edwards schrieb:
You can check the alsa email archives to see if
someone has started development on your sound card, or
you can join one of the alsa development lists and ask
about your sound card there:
http://www.alsa-project.org/mailing-lists.php
--- chgans(a)free.fr wrote:
>Quoting Lee Revell <rlrevell(a)joe-job.com>om>:
>
>
>
>>On Mon, 2005-11-28 at 23:01 +0100, chgans(a)free.fr
>>
>>
>wrote:
>
>
>>>Quoting Sean Edwards <cybersean3000(a)yahoo.com>om>:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>>I do not see the SB Audigy SE in the Alsa
>>>>
>>>>
>supported
>
>
>>>>devices list. I do see the ES and the Audigy
>>>>
>>>>
>2 ZS:
>
>
>>>yes but considering the ChangeLog from 1.0.8 and
>>>
>>>
>1.0.9 [1], the
>
>
>>identification
>>
>>
>>>for this card have been added in the list for
>>>
>>>
>identification:
>
>
>>> + EMU10K1/EMU10K2 driver
>>> - Added identification for the Audigy ES.
>>>
>>>
>>SE and ES are not the same thing.
>>
>>
>Yes, you're rigth, i've made a mistake...
>So what can i do to have my board working? Do i have
>a chance that it will be
>supported soon?
>
>I'm a little disapointed, when i buy it, i was
>having two choice, a SB live! and
>this one, unfortunately i choose the SE...
>
>
>
Unfotunately, the sb Live! you had seen was propably one of those
sb live 24bit 7.1. They also suck like hell, thou they might be supported,
at least better than not-at-all. but basically these are cheap dsp-less
soundcards,
that can't do any better than some fuxx0red onboard audio chipsets.
(ok, with some boards, audio-quality is really poor, bt the satement is
at least true for audio processing capabilities)
tom
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