Creative Labs to open SB Live Drivers 139
Several people wrote to us to let us know that Creative Labs has decided to make the drivers for their Soundblaster Live open source. They made the announcement and also said they will be setting up a CVS/Bugzilla system to aid in development. Jon Taylor, of S3 and nVidia fame, along with several other coders have been asked to oversee the development. Additionally, they confirmed that they are working with Lokisoft to work Environmental Audio and "3D
Audio" on the Linux platform. Lokisoft makes most of the uber-cool games for Linux.
Major Significance for Open Source SB Live Drivers (Score:4)
This is beyond that.
The SB Live is based on a single, ridiculously powerful and extremely programmable DSP. Almost all functions the chipset performs are executed in DSP level software, meaning suddenly Linux is getting full specs on a complete digital processing environment.
The impacts of this are substantial. The SB Live chipset is cheap enough that it's a contender for "standard sound" in many machines. Open source algorithms for everything from MP3 encoding to analog synth simulation to the more esoteric, non-sound related stuff(GIMP graphical filters, datastream analysis, etc.) should, if the drivers are clean enough, start popping up over time.
The uses of such a powerful digital signal processor on an open platform are honestly unpredictable at this point in time. While there are hardcoded design issues in the SB Live chipset(most notably, all signals are upsampled to 48khz before processing may occur), the sheer flexibility of this chipset will blow Linux programmers out of the water.
This is truly excellent news, and shouldn't be ignored as a mere fun thing for the gamers to play with. If only 3D graphics hardware was as programmable...or as open.
Yours Truly,
Dan Kaminsky
DoxPara Research
http://www.doxpara.com
Possible Reason for Open Source? (Score:1)
It does make sense, Creative gets the work done for free, and they'll get QA on it to boot. Economically, it makes perfect sense, and it's an all-around good decision. This is a good case to use in citing why Open Source is a Good Thing(tm). Look like the Live! will win over a lot of people who wouldn't have bought it before now.
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Drivers I'd like to have available.... (Score:2)
If you ever have driver trouble with a HP Laser, select LaserJet 4 - always works because it's straight PCL 5, no extra crap.
ALSA has such a blacklist. (Score:1)
It's pretty short, too.
http://www.alsa-project.org/black.html
Creative: Doing it right, for profit (Score:5)
Wow, creative is setting up CVS/Bugzilla. They're not merely opening the source; they're not just trying to grasp a bit of extra PR out of the Linux mindshare gods(Taco and Hemos
This is amazing, and deserves a retrospective profile in around six months to see how this great, precedent setting experiment panned out.
Of course, Creative isn't dumb. As I mentioned in another post, Creative stands to have their card become the standard DSP component in innumerable Linux machines--their foresight in developing a programmable sound card is very likely to pay off handsomely in increased sales.
The economics of Open Source [doxpara.com] just got much more interesting.
Yours Truly,
Dan Kaminsky
DoxPara Research
http://www.doxpara.com
Re:The importance of whining. (Score:1)
Check some of my correspondence: Europe developer support [euronet.nl] and US developer support [euronet.nl]
The amount of people that do this, is also important and remember, look at things from their perspective when emailing. Things like this, will eventual frustrate them and make 'm think...
Manuël Beunder, maintainer of The SB Live! Linux page [euronet.nl]
ps, I also forgot to mention that releasing a GPL-ed source, means they support GPL, making it also possible for ALSA to start working again on the drivers...
GREAT! (Score:1)
Re:Drivers I'd like to have available.... (Score:1)
"We hope you find fun and laughter in the new millenium" - Top half of fastfood gamepiece
Lokisoft makes most of the uber-cool games? (Score:1)
This is excellent news.
However, I'm not entirely happy with the assertion that Lokisoft makes 'most of the uber-cool games' for Linux! This article was about how cool it is that Creative are open-sourcing their SBLive drivers. And it is very cool. So remember, that Loki don't make open source games.
Now, I do of course understand why they don't. And I do think Loki is a very exciting company, and they're doing exciting things for Linux, and I'm sure it won't be all that long before we see some more open source offerings from Loki.
But, I'd just like to remind people that there are some excellent open source games for Linux. My personal fave has to be FreeCiv - http://www.freeciv.org/ [freeciv.org] - and pingus will be excellent when it goes 1.0 - http://pingus.seul.org/ [seul.org]
For many other superb linux games, many of them open source, pop over to http://happypenguin.org/ [happypenguin.org]
Jules
Re: finally (Score:1)
Re:Major Significance for Open Source SB Live Driv (Score:2)
But I really hope Im wrong, and there could be other possibilities too, that they provide their algorithms as precompiled libraries or something but keeping other parts of the DSP code open..
WOOHOO!!! (Score:1)
This is truly great news
This isn't just a Linux win. (Score:4)
I'm endlessly pleased by this. Now, to work on them to release specs for their DXR decoders and the like. (Give an inch, take a mile.
--
Brandon Hume
hume -> BOFH.Halifax.NS.Ca, http://WWW.BOFH.Halifax.NS.Ca/
Nice to see.... (Score:2)
Re:Nice to see.... (Score:1)
---
A3D drivers (Score:1)
AUGGHH (Score:1)
Ding-dong A3D (Score:3)
Yay, this makes me even more happy that I chose a soundcard by A3D, hoping to support competition rather than the market leader, when I bought my computer way back when. A year later, and now those who chose SB Live's have a opensource drivers, and what do I have? A $30 closed source (crippled and buggy) solution from Opensound, and Aureal support claiming they might have drivers out "towards the end of 1999" (though they also claim they will be "more open-source" whatever that means).
Never the less, I am not bitter. It's great that Creative are seeing the light here, and I hope that more companies (cough, cough) could follow in their footsteps. It just feels so wrong that the only way to get good sound support in Linux is to support a huge company with a defacto monopoly in this area. That was sort of what I was trying to get away from...
-
It makes sense. Now they see the sense. (Score:4)
my 2 cents.
Sounds good but... (Score:1)
Loki involvement (Score:2)
it would definitely be nice to have sound programming be as easy to use as network programming...
We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars --Oscar Wilde
Re:Drivers I'd like to have available.... (Score:1)
----------------
"Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds." - Albert Einstein
Re:Major Significance for Open Source SB Live Driv (Score:1)
I'm sceptical though towards seeing sound card DSPs used in general data processing. Isn't the data path too slow? It's only 48000 kHz * 2 channels * 2 bytes/channel = 192kbps. For example, mp3 encoders such as LAME are already a lot faster than this on fast PII/III's. And on the Athlon, doubly so.
Re:RedHat 6.1 (kernel 2.2.12) (Score:1)
_______________________________________________
There is no statute of limitation on stupidity.
Re:This isn't just a Linux win. (Score:1)
It's probably not really open. (Score:1)
They say in the announcement, there are two sets of drivers, one open source and one BINARY ONLY.
The FAQ has the same information, and suggests that the open source driver will only be a loader for the binary only module to avoid recompiling the kernel.
So it seems that we have a lion in sheeps disguise.
Also, if the free loader is GPL'ed, you must not redistribute the driver, because you can't provide the source for the binary only module. Sorry guys, I am suspicious until I see the full details.
Open Source? What does that mean? (Score:1)
Re:Major Significance for Open Source SB Live Driv (Score:1)
Oh no, not again. Ignore the logical errors in previous post.
What I meant was 48kHz * 2 * 2 = 192 kilobytes/s.
But it's still slow in mp3 coding, since the input stream cannot be faster that real time.
Re:RedHat 6.1 (kernel 2.2.12) (Score:1)
Re:Creative is getting cooler in my book (Score:5)
OK, I guess the cat is out of the bag now. Like the article says,
Creative is opening the sources to the existing SBLive (Emu10K1,
technically) Linux kernel driver. The current sourcebase is what would
have been release as beta4 of the driver, with 4-speaker support (stereo
mirroring only at present) and SPDIF output being the main changes from
beta3. Also being released are beta sources for a DXR2 driver which
were donated to Creative by Andrew de Quincey (thanks, Andrew!). The
source for both projects will be released under the GPL. We are
planning to submit kernel patches as soon as possible, after the
open-source development community has had a chance to beat on the driver
sources for a bit and whip them into shape.
Also as the article mentioned, Creative is going to launch an
open-source development support site with FAQs, CVS repositiories,
CVSWeb tracking, Bugzilla, mailing lists, and all the other standard
open source project website services. The site will be up and running
sometime early next week - PLEASE do not overload
developer.soundblaster.com with repeated checks to see if the site is up
yet, OK? We'll announce loud and clear when the server goes live.
So, that's where things stand as of Friday evening. All of us here at
Creative are really excited about this, and we have all worked hard to
get to this point. Huge numbers of people have been asking for the
source since we announced the driver development project early this
year. Many of those same e-mails were from people who wanted to be able
to hack the driver sources themselves. Well, here's what you all have
been asking for all year, and what we promised you back in February.
Happy hacking!
Jon Taylor
Linux Driver Engineer
Creative Labs
jtaylor@creativelabs.com
Re:Yes, way to go Creative... (Score:1)
has anyone else been emailing them and bugging them like I have? every single time I have a problem with Creative's hardware (which, given the DxR2, is a lot) I stick in a "oh yeah, and WHEN will this work with linux?"...
now I'm waiting for them DVD drivers. even closed source. software decoding is fine too. just let me watch the movies!!!
Lea
Re:Drivers I'd like to have available.... (Score:1)
Creative Drivers (Score:1)
Thank God Almighty they are free at last! (Score:1)
this is probably some of the greatest new i have ever heard - i grabbed the SBLive! value when it came out, and after running it for months in my windows machine and loving the eviornmental audio, when i upgraded my linux box to rh6.1, i decided to swap the sound cards and try out some enviornmental audio in linux (oh how silly i was).
much to my chagrin, i went to creative's site and found (oh the horror...) object files!! YUCK! I was not happy. And as if that wasn't enough of a kick in the head, the last kernel they compiled it for was 2.2.10 - i would have to DOWNGRADE my kernel to run it! No way! I didn't feel like doing that, so a couple days and an "insmod -f" later, i had sound.
of course, no special features or anything, and i couldn't play
So i was happy for a little while, but it didn't last very long, eventually i just became bitter towards creative - wrote them some e-mail asking for better drivers (them:"we'll have one out early 2000"). and so i eventually just decided to live with the fact that i had an awesome soundcard made by a bunch of bastards.
and then comes this story! woo hoo! I love creative!!! - i'm proud to own a card made by such a wonderful company
---
A Test of Open Source vs. Closed Development (Score:3)
This is a first. Where a company not only released their source for a driver, but are also making their only closed driver. Creative, and any other company, will see first-hand at what opening up source will do. Because they will have something to test it against with the binary-only driver that Creative is making.
In a couple months, Creative will realease their new binary-only driver and say "our driver does this, that, and the otherthing", and whoever is taking up the Open Source lead will go"our driver does all of that, is more stable at doing it, and has features that you never would have though of"
Let's hope that other companies see the light of what opening up drivers can do. Not only does it make for a better product, but I bet opening the drivers sold about a couple hundred thousand SB Live! cards to linux users that would have sooner pissed on the card yesterday then bought one due to linux support and drivers.
SMP support (Score:1)
Re:Others should follow (Score:1)
I am actually surprised, beyond the thread of reverse engineering their other concern has to be product support - bad support looks horrible on them, and they have no way to support drivers that other people are making.
I imagine they just got convinced that the new drivers couldn't possibly be worse than the existing ones, and that they could weasel their way out of supporting people not using windows
Slashdot Sux (Score:1)
Re:I wonder how open source these drivers will be (Score:1)
People have been bugging them forever to open it, but their response has been that the functionality of the SBLive is "1/3 hardware, 1/3 software, and 1/3 DSP code" (these were the approximate words of the Creative person who replied).
Unfortunately, some of that code will likely stay closed, simply to protect their IP. All I can say is that whatever they open, it's about time! Creative has a policy of not responding to emails or posts to their newgroups, and so there were endless floods of frustrated, bewildered people. Nobody really knew what was going on behind the doors at Creative, and there was precious little in the way of authoritative info from them. It was only recently that they even put up a FAQ. I have to sympathize with them a little though... There were some people who flamed them mercilessly (publicly), and I'm sure there were even more who did it privately via email.
Re:Lokisoft makes most of the uber-cool games? (Score:1)
New SB Live! Support (Score:1)
Does anyone know if there is any support for external MIDI devices on linux right now? (keyboard, etc. for MIDI input).
Before I get to excited . . . (Score:1)
So, I would like to ask, will specs be released and are they needed to make sound card drivers? I am pretty sure that I will not contribute anything besides maybe bug reports, even if specs are released, but with specs, I would suspect a better driver would be released. I hope it won't end up like the TNT drivers, where nobody changes them becuase they have no idea what to do without specs.
Creative... (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
3D audio is crucial (Score:1)
A while back, I got a dualshock controller for my Playstation - just for the analog joysticks, but I was amazed at how effective those two little vibrators in the handles are at making the game come to life. I'm now a convert to force feedback as well. I picked up a Logitech Wingman Force the other day, and I absolutely love it. Implementing the IForce library in Linux would be a very good thing - has anyone heard about programming specs for the Wingman Force? They have a 16 bit controller onboard and a USB connection - just think, we could make a Beowulf cluster
This is interesting. Let's see what Aureal does (Score:2)
Compare this to Creative, who are now not only announcing that their already available (and free) drivers will be made open, but they are also planning on actually implementing 3D sound in Linux. I don't particularily like Creative, but you've got to love this!
As I said before, I think Aureal has better hardware. And their 3D sound is considerably more sophisticated as they implement "wavetracing" in which the path of the sound wave is actually modelled. But does this matter if they don't have 3D sound support in Linux? OK, 3D sound is mostly used in games and most games are still in windoze, so I pretty much have windoze on my computer for the sole purpose of playing games. Lack of 3D sound in Linux didn't bother me before because there were nothing in Linux that could actually take advantage of it. This situation is thankfully starting to change. 3D video support in Linux is improving by leaps and bounds and many more games are being made available for Linux. But until now there just hasn't been any 3D sound.
So, just in case anyone from Aureal is here, if you don't offer something comparable my next sound card will be a SB Live even though I think it's inferior technology and I don't like Creative. OK?
Re:Drivers I'd like to have available.... (Score:1)
"We hope you find fun and laughter in the new millenium" - Top half of fastfood gamepiece
Re: A3D drivers (Score:2)
Only the mixer is supported, so it is not yet very useful, but that's a start.
Re: (Score:1)
Certainly there are other printers that are better suited for Linux, and HP deserves a large raspberry for refusing to reveal details of their printer protocol.
Re:This isn't just a Linux win. (Score:1)
Anyway... yes, there are GPL'd drivers in the FreeBSD source. They're carefully modular in case they need to be torn out in the event of conflict, but it hasn't happened yet.
The GPL and BSD licenses aren't THAT incompatible. I'm pretty sure its only when someone decides to take a source fork commercial that problems occur.
--
Brandon Hume
hume -> BOFH.Halifax.NS.Ca, http://WWW.BOFH.Halifax.NS.Ca/
Re:DVD? (Score:1)
watch your dvd's
Renaissance in sound (Score:2)
When I bought my latest computer last year, I naively decided to get a SB Live! since it seemed like such a cool card, and it was by Creative, so how could there not be Linux drivers for it?
When I discovered there were no drivers, and that Creative was not releasing the specifications, I was understandably disappointed. After the first beta drivers came out, I could at least get some sound out of the card. But some games didn't work with it, and it still had less functionality than the AWE32 driver. So my younger brother got a free upgrade from AWE32 to SB Live!, and I got a free downgrade that gave me more functionality. If the driver at that time had been open source, I honestly would have spent my whole summer hacking it to do cool stuff.
My point? This is a VERY SMART MOVE by Creative. There are a LOT of DSP hackers in college, just itching to write cool DSP code. Sound has been an often neglected field of hacking. We are on the verge of a Renaissance in sound. Under Linux, there is a good abstraction layer between the programmer and the soundcard. All the demo programmers, trackers, general code hackers, etc. are coming to Linux. The Linux crew has traditionally been made up of more 'mature' programmers. But with the rise in popularity of Linux, the migration is inevitable. And these people will bring new ideas of what is "cool" to program. Look for lots of cool sound programs in the next couple years.
Re:Drivers I'd like to have available.... (Score:2)
The reason I say that is because printers normally contain a bundle of hardware to handle interpreting the commands sent from the computer, buffering data, in some cases handling rasterizing, etc. For example, an old Epson printer would buffer and interpret commands in the Esc/P language, which meant that you could write a driver that output Esc/P (the specifics of which were generally available to the public) and send it to the printer. In the case of PostScript, all the computer has to do is throw the PostScript file (which can be plain ASCII) at the printer - the printer would buffer the PS data (in higher-end printers, the buffer might be 8MB or more), rasterize it (usually with a RISC processor dedicated to the task) and then print the end result.
Of course, all of that costs money, so some bright spark came up with the idea of WinPrinters, which are basically only a buffer. The computer does everything else - command interpretation, rasterizing, whatever - and blasts the result at the printer in pure binary form, ready for printing. This means that unless you have a VERY precise idea of what binary data the printer is expecting, you don't have a hope in hell of writing a driver, not to mention that doing all the work on the computer side can be quite a strain for older machines.
If Creative is reading this... (Score:2)
I have a 6x/3dxr DVD decoder kit, and I've been dieing to couple it to the SB Live (so I get four speaker output.) The Linux angle was the only thing holding me back.
The only question now is... Regular or Platinum?
Re:RedHat 6.1 (kernel 2.2.12) (Score:2)
Is it released already? I thought that they said that CVS and Bugzilla is not going to ready for at least a week, or so.
--
Re:Lokisoft makes most of the uber-cool games? (Score:1)
I mean, what do you have to present as a counter-argument? Freeciv and Pingus. A Civilisation clone, and a Lemmings clone. Clones of games that still might play well, but are way past their use-by dates as far as the available technology goes.
Open source evanglism is all well and good, but eventually you'll have to come up with the goods. Show me an open source StarCraft or Half Life, and _then_ I'll be listening.
Until then, until the open source movement comes up with something of the same calibre as Civ:CTP, then I'll be happy to continue to support Loki, and their uber cool games.
Charles Miller
Re:This isn't just a Linux win. (Score:1)
Ian
DVD? (Score:1)
With that said, I just hope that I can get the software for my Creative Dxr3 DVD board and player sometime. I know it can't be OS due to patent/copyright/whatever problems but I'd accept any from-Creative ware that lets me reboot to Windows even less than I do now (actually, with a DVD player for Linux, that would only be for Halflife playing. Valve?).
Re:Drivers I'd like to have available.... (Score:2)
For example, the Epson Stylus Color 640 does not differ much from the old 600, except that it leaves out some of the more obscure ESC/P2 commands, but it is badged "windows only"...It worked fine on my amiga, let alone linux...
This is different to the "WinPrinter" models you describe, which are marked, often with identical logos, as "windows only". This can get very irritating, as I'm sure you can imagine - but we can blame it all on microsoft - they push the "windows printer" mark, presumably to encourage lock-in....
Beowulf (Score:1)
(yeah yeah yeah, if you're gonna have a beowulf, why run something like seti..... but it goes w/ the theme of the post)
OpenSource and binary? (Score:2)
Or then the other possibility will be that there will be a full and limited opensource driver and a different binary driver with more features.
But don't get me wrong, it's a good thing they make drivers for linux and even make a 3d sound api, but I really would like to see how you program that live prosessor (and do something weird with it)..
Re:Major Significance for Open Source SB Live Driv (Score:1)
I remember the original NeXT hardware had a general purpose DSP included. Unfortunately, nobody really knew how to program it or what to with it. I hope some Linux hackers figure it out.
Re:Ding-dong A3D (Score:1)
Re:It makes sense. Now they see the sense. (Score:3)
Peer review is one of the founding points of Open Source software. And while efforts like this are WAY better then nothing at all, without specs there can be no peer review. Lets contrast two recent Big Hardware moves to Open Source, Matrox and nVidea.
nVidea released an opensource driver based on SGI's recently opensourced glx protocol. Right off the bat, you could play Q3Test on your nVidea card.
Matrox released specs for their G200/G400 cards. The driver took a while, but now plays Q3Test. And thanks to the specs being there, the driver is still being added to. The nVidea driver has no DMA, no AGP. The Matrox driver has these. And without specs, they can't be added to the nVidea one.
Anyway, that was my example. My point is that now that we're getting open source drivers, lets push for specs too. We'll end up with better drivers then.
Re:Creative: Doing it right, for profit (Score:1)
>it's Loki's API, which was going to be LGPLed from
>day 1, and Scott Draeker approached Creative for
>technical assistance.
>Scott, being the Open Source evangelist that he is
>(no, that wasn't sarcastic) must've done some
>convincing of Creative executives
To give credit where it's due, Creative was *really* excited about the project. Not a whole lot of convincing necessary
Scott Draeker
Re:RedHat 6.1 (kernel 2.2.12) (Score:1)
come to think of it... (Score:1)
that was the gist of it anyway...
smash(just bought an SB-Live last week too...
Re:I'm off to order one (Score:1)
Others should follow (Score:4)
What they risk is that it makes it a bit easier for their competitors to reverse engineer their products. This is a very small risk. I am sure their competitors are quite capable of reverse engineering without the source.
The benefit is that this could give them a serious competitive edge. Their drivers should become significantly better than those of their closed-source competitors. They also stand to gain a significant amount of customer loyalty from Linux geeks.
This should allow them to increase their focus on producing great hardware.
I am a bit disappointed that they haven't opened the source to their drivers for other platforms. I suspect this is because they don't think there are enough open-source Win32 programmers. I think they are wrong on this. However, with the Linux source it should be possible (not easy, but possible) to write drivers for Windoze etc. if we want to.
I hope other hardware manufacturers follow. I have seen several brilliant bits of hardware totally compromised by shoddy drivers.
I wonder how open source these drivers will be (Score:1)
Re:Ding-dong A3D (Score:2)
The above may seem like flamebait, but before you consider it so, please remember that Creative is a corporation. Their top priority is making money.
--
RedHat 6.1 (kernel 2.2.12) (Score:1)
Now I'll be compiling it on my own next monday
Creative is getting cooler in my book (Score:1)
Sincerely,
Alexander
Re:Others should follow (Score:1)
I guess the reason for going open-source with their Linux drivers is simply that they are busy with other things and want to speed up development without adding more costs. (Their new SB Live isn't directly compatible to the old SB standard and therefore doesn't work with the existing SB drivers, so they had to develop a new one and probably answer thousands of requests)
Just like other soundcard developers (like Terratec) Creative have always been very reluctant to releasing specs and source code. As their Win32 drivers are already functionning very well, they do not need to put much work into them because apart from bug-fixing they're finished.
Now that's only a guess of mine. Does any insider have more info on why they made that step?
Yes, way to go Creative... (Score:5)
SB Live! under Linux page, I just have some things
I like to say..
A lot of ppl already know, Creative went a long, long way from releasing a binary only kernel specific driver, developing at a slow speed with loads of bugs, towards finally even having a FAQ and supporting CVS under GPL and supporting
people who wants to make their own driver under Linux. I you look at Creative, at first being not willing to provide 4front with the nessary information, to continue development and also not seeming to understand the need of having the source available or chopping up the driver into a kernel independant part with source
and a binary part for the DSP
(just check my page on the details..)
that's a big difference...
And Creative also didn't spend much resources
on Linux, because that's not where to money comes
from (We don't buy any Live Ware 3 or whatever upgrades)
But it now seems like Creative fully changed course and is also spending more resources on this thing (also with hiring Jon Taylor, a very good move) they even are working on finding a way
to support 3D audio or EAX, since Aureal thinks,
that's up to Creative, this is a very important step...
I think this move looks very good, also since
Aureal is also working on Linux support,
it really shows that times are changing for Linux
and that even heavy commercial compagnies like
Creative are realizing this..
This is sure much more than I ever hoped for
and to be honest, after seeing a message that
someone was going to buy a SB Live! because he
saw that there was at least a page that supported
it, was almost a reason for me to dismantle it.
Because I only started this page out of the frustration, not being given any support from Creative (like a FAQ or proper install instructions)..
Manuel Beunder (also going under MBr)
http://www.euronet.nl/~mailme
The SB Live! Linux page
FAQ is Sept. 23... (Score:1)
We'll have to see.
not quite (Score:1)
First MP3 speeds are in kbits/sec not kbytes/sec
I have no idea what the specs on the SB live are, but they are alot faster then that. For one thing, it is 4 channel not 2, so 48k * 4 * 16 bits = 3Mbits/sec. But that is totally imaterial as that is the is the output speed of the sound samples. While it is spitting out 3Mbits/s, the DSP needs a whole lot of clock cycles to apply all the effects. In addition it needs time to combine all the seperate digital input channels as well as sampling the line-in, mic-in and other analog inputs.
Trust me that DSP can process a lot data at once.
Re:I'm off to order one (Score:1)
Re:Ding-dong A3D (Score:1)
I got tired of having no sound under Linux for my $30 Aureal A3D card. So, when I was out buying Civ:CTP for Linux, I also picked up a $30 Ensoniq AudioPCI card, which works great under Linux. Problem solved!
Don't forget to say "thank you!" (Score:2)
I'm sure that some compliments couldn't hurt their commitment to making the SB Live! work better with Linux (and other OSes, by the way). Pat them on their collective head and tell them they've been good. :)
Comments developer relations can be emailed to dev-questions@creative.com [mailto] or submitted by web at http://developer.soundblaster.com/feedb ack/ [soundblaster.com].
If anyone has any other addresses which may be appropriate, feel free to post 'em!
Re:SMP support (Score:1)
Of course, when the kernel patches arrive, people will be free to make it SMP safe themselves
smash
ME TOO! Re:Trident 4D Wave is still better. (Score:1)
I hate to be an AOLer, but "Me Too" :-)
I specifically bought my HoonTech Trident 4DWaveNX because of the ALSA support. (http://www.project-alsa.org [project-alsa.org]) It took me a while to find a company that sold 4Dwave but I am glad I did instead of buying one of the SB cards that all the local stores are pushing.
Hoontech [hoontech.com] can be found at http://www.hoontech.com/.
If you are in Canada you can order HoonTech products from Votron Electronics [votronelectronics.com] (in Ontario) at http://www.votronelectronics.com/hoontech/order.ht m
Thinking of HoonTech, does anyone have one of thier amps? I was thinking of getting the PA2000 to connect my machine to a couple of nice big unpowered speakers. It looks like it should fit into a 5 1/2 drive bay, does it?
Re:DVD? (Score:1)
Just ordered 6.1 (Score:1)
Gonna be nice to be on the bleeding-edge side of the non-experimental setups again.
Re:The importance of whining. (Score:1)
HH
Re:RedHat 6.1 (kernel 2.2.12) (Score:1)
Re:you're gonna hate me... (Score:1)
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"Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds." - Albert Einstein
Re:Drivers I'd like to have available.... (Score:1)
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"Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds." - Albert Einstein
Re:not quite (Score:1)
So sending stuff to the card should be no problem, but I remeber reading an interview with E-mus chief technichian Dave Rossum, and when the asked him if the EMU10k1 dsp would be capable of doin things like MPEG-2 decoding, he said it could not be done because MPEG-2 decoding was done in the frequency domain and that the EMU10K1 is a time-domain processor. I think the same would apply to encoding MP3 files, not that i know that much a bout the algorithms behind but there is sure as hell a lot of frequency-domain stuff involved.
Re:Lokisoft makes most of the uber-cool games? (Score:1)
I'm not saying you (or anyone) shouldn't support Loki.
I question your claim that Half-Life is anything 'new' or 'exciting'. Half-Life is just Quake with different graphics and tweaked gameplay. Similarly, StarCraft was just WarCraft with new graphics.
Whereas FreeCiv, I think, is a classic
The open source gaming scene is taking off. In a couple of years time, it will be much more exciting.
Jules
Re:Creative: Doing it right, for profit (Score:1)
Re:Yes, way to go Creative... (Score:1)
The importance of whining. (Score:3)
At last!
I'm proud to say that I've mailed SoundBlaster at least twice to tell them politely that I think they should OpenSource their drivers, pointing at other companies doing so, at the ALSA team's (admirable and steadfast) refusal to use the emu10k1 code as long as it isn't opened to the public, and at what they've got to loose (nothing, or close to it).
What they achieve by doing this is, at least, that I won't throw my SB Live out the window and buy a card from a company that's opensourced their drivers. And, as many others have pointed out, it's a public stunt, and probably gives them a feather in the hat on Wall Street as well. I don't care that they didn't OpenSource the Windows drivers, and I think it's appropriate too, as Windows itself isn't particulary OpenSource. Let them have their model, and we will have ours.
What I really wrote in to say is that if you have a piece of hardware, whose spesifications isn't released, you shold go to the website of the companiy that made it, search out the appropriate email address, and write them (politely!) about it, explaining the need, the motivation and the reward. Customer feedback is important fuel for decision making.
After all, without customers....
Trident 4D Wave is still better. (Score:2)
Trident has been open longer, and help writting ALSA.
Re:Sounds good but... (Score:1)
Re:RedHat 6.1 (kernel 2.2.12) (Score:2)
Drivers I'd like to have available.... (Score:2)
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"Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds." - Albert Einstein
Dell? Gateway? (Score:2)
Re:It makes sense. Now they see the sense. (Score:3)
For the non-cheap cards from such manufacturers, it is the drivers that are making them the money.