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Solve : Should i buy a soundcard for a 2.1 speaker setup? |
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Answer» Hi i am currently using a integrated soundcard that came with my PC when i bought it, usually they are rubbish so I was wondering if i should buy a new one? If you have XP , THATS A WONDERFUL CARD.What does XP have to do with it?Ok, thanks for the fast replies. I don't actually don't know if the sound meets my NEEDS yet as i won't have my speakers until christmas. ILL wait until i get them hooked up before deciding. One more question. I hear that buying a soundcard relieves the CPU of having to process the sound? Does this slow the CPU by much?Quote from: soybean on December 19, 2007, 07:54:14 PM Quote from: honvetops on December 19, 2007, 07:46:01 PMIf you have XP , THATS A WONDERFUL CARD.What does XP have to do with it? there are a lot of people who have had problems with this particular card and vista.* "drivers"Quote from: honvetops on December 20, 2007, 04:40:54 AM Quote from: soybean on December 19, 2007, 07:54:14 PMAlso with Win2K.Quote from: honvetops on December 19, 2007, 07:46:01 PMIf you have XP , THATS A WONDERFUL CARD.What does XP have to do with it? A dedicated sound card does take the work off the CPU when playing sounds, however it's not usually much of a burden for modern CPUs. One specific area where a dedicated sound card rocks the socks off onboard sound is in gaming - much better sound quality and directional positioning (even with 2.1 sound like me, it's useful to know what side an enemy is on) plus potentially better frame rates. If you play a lot of games, or really like your music to sound good, a dedicated card is a great investment. Just avoid the Audigy SE and the X-Fi Xtreme Audio cards. |
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