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mjattie
Hi, I'm Mjattie (mathijs wiermans). I've been playing music for over 9 years and composing music for over 4 years. Have a look... Also, visit my official myspace: www.myspace.com/mjat tie follow me on twitter: www.twitter.com/mjat tie

mathijs wiermans MW Audio @mjattie

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New sound card

Posted by mjattie - September 2nd, 2008


I'm building a new computer and I need a sound card. On wikipedia is a lot of information about ASIO and it sounds good to me, but I can't find any card with ASIO... What am I doing wrong? My budget is 50-100 euro (72.58-145.16 dollar) But I prefer off course the lowest price, if it's what I'm searching for.

I'm searching a card that has much sound quality, surround 5.1 (but is not necessary). And that supports MIDI keyboards. But not needs a MIDI port.

Wikipedia:
Audio Stream Input/Output (ASIO) is a computer soundcard driver protocol for digital audio specified by Steinberg, providing a low-latency and high fidelity interface between a software application and a computer's sound card. Whereas Microsoft's DirectSound is commonly used as a stereo input and output for non-professional users, ASIO allows musicians and sound engineers to process their audio via Windows' computer software instead of external hardware.

ASIO bypasses the normal audio path from the user application through layers of intermediary Windows operating system software, so that the application connects directly to the soundcard hardware. Each layer that is bypassed means a reduction in latency, the delay between an application sending sound to the sound being reproduced by the soundcard. In this way ASIO offers a relatively simple way of accessing multiple audio inputs and outputs independently. Its main strength lies in its method of bypassing the inherently high latency of operating system audio mixing kernels (KMixer), allowing direct, high speed communication with audio hardware. Unlike KMixer, an unmixed ASIO output is "bit identical", that is, the bits sent to the sound card are identical to those of the original WAV file, thus having higher audio fidelity.

Interface support is normally restricted to Microsoft Windows, since other operating systems (e.g. Apple's Mac OS X or Linux) do not have such mixer latency problems. In Windows Vista, KMixer has been removed and replaced by a new WaveRT port driver. WaveRT cannot provide synchronized audio to multiple devices and does not support external clocks.[1]

As of 2007 there is also an experimental ASIO driver for Wine, a Windows layer for Linux. This wineasio driver uses the JACK sound server as its audio back-end and allows many ASIO-aware applications to run with low-latency under WINE.

Mjattie

ah I know what card it will be XD


Comments

I wish I could help ^^
All I ca say is, if you want a good computer, don't get old, and cheap parts.

k tx XD