Vladimir Vassilevsky wrote:
> On 4/23/2013 3:04 PM, Joerg wrote:
>> Folks,
>>
>> The Creative Sound Blaster X-Fi HD was a major disappointment. It is
>> going back unless it decides to work properly very soon.
>
> What is the problem?
>
Numerous ones. It stopped putting out signals on the line outputs out of
the blue, at random. Then one the input both channels worked only with
the RIAA amp, without it no signal was received. And so on.
Aggravating factors were that the installed SW caused an increadible
bloat, the company web page support link did not accept my inquiry, they
give no phone numbers, the only email I found was from their ivetsor
guy. Who chose not to even answer.
Long story short I have already sent it back and won't buy a Creative
product again.
I have uninstalled their software, now I have to figure out how to
uninstall their driver.
>> So, looking for a better USB sound module. Miso mentioned C-Media but I
>> could only find chips on their site:
>
> Been burned with C-Media hardware. Experienced sample rate
> irregularities. Looks like sampling clock is done by divider with
> variable ratio.
>
Oh, that would be very bad in my case. Looks like I need to reseach this
whole sound card topic out a lot more.
>> Who makes decent USB sound modules with these chips? Should be on a USB
>> cable, not a dongle. Must support Windows XP, have stereo line in and
>> line out. Preferably from an American company, or at least one that
>> lists phone numbers on their web site, actually cares about their
>> customers and has useful technical manuals.
>>
>> I need this for EE stuff, not audio. So as plain vanilla as possible
>> would be good. Price can be up to $100.
>
> I've used SB Extigy for work for many years. Had to switch to SB THX HD
> because Extigy is unsupported on W7. No problems with either one.
>
I am dreading Windows 7, big time, for such reasons. Eventually I'll
have to buy a couple of simple netbook for this. My Samsung NC-10 with
XP works like a champ but with XP I can only buy used and then the
batteries are mostly shot.