Which sound card should I purchase in order to record digitally to my computer?
2007-02-21 14:02:37 UTC
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Four answers:
2007-02-21 14:06:54 UTC
All sound cards record digitally to your computer. This company has been in business for a long time and makes sound cards of all price ranges and capacities:
www.soundblaster.com
TheAnswerMan
2007-02-21 15:11:04 UTC
Sound card vendors have come and gone over the past 15 years. They all rely on commodity sound chips, or custom chips. The chips have come from vendors like Aureal, Media Vision, ESS, Philips, Cirrus Logic and Creative Labs. A quick look at the new Microsoft VISTA compatibility guide shows an overwhelming support for Creative Labs products (i.e. Audigy or Soundblaster Live 24-bit), but a fairly huge LACK of support for MOST ALL other chipsets. Hence, your solution may be short lived unless you buy Creative Labs products.
If it were me, I would get a Creative Labs Audigy card, with or without breakout box. They can be found under $100 these days when on sale.
pirozzi
2016-11-25 03:34:04 UTC
Use somebody elses advice for a valid card, yet a working laptop or pc can basically guard digital records, sound, video clips, documents, you call it. digital records is the bit is on or it rather is off. era. Analog, while in comparison with digital, the fee could be a million.5. Sorry with regard to the information, yet properly you understand us techies
littleman77y
2007-02-21 14:13:44 UTC
I haven't upgraded in a while, but I'm fond of my SB Audigy Platinum. The Audigy drive up front is especially nice for connecting up mixing equipment, if you have the extra bay in your tower.
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