Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Value card, a typical (circa 2000) PCI sound card. A sound card (also known as an audio card) is an internal expansion card that provides input and output of audio signals to and from a computer under the control of computer programs. The term sound card is also applied to external audio interfaces used for professional audio applications.
It was a full-length ISA digital audio and 'wavetable' sample-based synthesis audio card, equipped with a 2 MB Ensoniq-built ROM-based patch set. Ensoniq SoundscapeDB The SSDB was a ' wavetable ' daughterboard ( sample-based synthesis daughterboard) upgrade for PCs with a sound card bearing a Wave Blaster -compatible connector.
A poor resampling implementation introduces artifacts into the audio which can be heard, and measured as higher intermodulation distortion, within higher frequencies (generally 16 kHz and up). [citation needed] X-Fi's resampling engine produces a near-lossless-quality result, far exceeding any known audio card DSP available at the time of ...
Ensoniq AudioPCI. The Ensoniq AudioPCI is a Peripheral Component Interconnect (PCI)-based sound card released in 1997. It was Ensoniq 's last sound card product before they were acquired by Creative Technology. The card represented a shift in Ensoniq's market positioning.
Auzentech, Inc. Auzentech was a Korean computer hardware manufacturer that specialized in high-definition audio equipment and in particular PC sound cards . Auzentech has its origins in March 2005, when under the company name HDA (HiTeC Digital Audio), [2] the company launched the X-Mystique 7.1, the first consumer add-in sound card to feature ...
Ensoniq Soundscape S-2000. Soundscape S-2000 was Ensoniq 's first direct foray into the PC sound card market. The card arrived on the market in 1994. It is a full-length ISA digital audio and sample-based synthesis device, equipped with a 2 MiB Ensoniq-built ROM -based patch set. Some OEM versions of the card feature a smaller 1 MiB patch set.
Ad Lib, Inc. Ad Lib, Inc. was a Canadian manufacturer of sound cards and other computer equipment founded by Martin Prevel, a former professor of music and vice-dean of the music department at the Université Laval. [1] The company's best known product, the AdLib Music Synthesizer Card (ALMSC), or simply the AdLib as it was called, was the ...
The Sound Blaster Pro was fully backward compatible with the original Sound Blaster line, and by extension, the AdLib sound card. The Sound Blaster Pro was the first Creative sound card to have a built-in CD-ROM interface. Most Sound Blaster Pro cards featured a proprietary interface for a Panasonic (Matsushita MKE) drive. The Sound Blaster Pro ...