

I'll hold judgement until I see exactly what the quality of the closed source drivers are.linuxtuxhellsinki wrote:Latest news from there
Closed bull at 2nd Q of 07Code: Select all
May 18, 2006 -- Creative plans to make proprietary (closed source) drivers available for the X-Fi series of sound cards in the second quarter of 2007. These drivers will have full support for ALSA (playback, recording, mixer, MIDI, synthesis) and OpenAL 1.1 (with EAX effects)
I'm sceptical. Even if they initially will be working I don't believe creative will quickly support newer kernel versions as they appear not to mention bug fixes. See their drivers in Windows, and what people had to do to make creative release new driver set for cracking/popping issue with xfi cards.Kai Hvatum wrote:I'll hold judgement until I see exactly what the quality of the closed source drivers are.linuxtuxhellsinki wrote:Latest news from there
Closed bull at 2nd Q of 07Code: Select all
May 18, 2006 -- Creative plans to make proprietary (closed source) drivers available for the X-Fi series of sound cards in the second quarter of 2007. These drivers will have full support for ALSA (playback, recording, mixer, MIDI, synthesis) and OpenAL 1.1 (with EAX effects)

I disagree. I'm abel to distinguish Audigys resampling problems quite easily. It doesn't even require any special abilities to do so. Decent headphones are enough. Resampling problem can be avoided though with software resampling, which is quite easily done in Linux and can be done in Windows also in certan cases, but in all cases it takes some CPU resources to do so. That's why I prefer X-fi over Audigy.boniek wrote:You won't be able to hear any differences between audigy and xfi on computer speakers (and even equipped with good speakers you would have to have superhuman hearing abilities).


The sound quality is noticeably better, between the X-Fi and Audigy 2 ZS I can without doubt hear a difference on my Grado SR-125. Also the front bay on the Platinum card is a built in amplifier which is great if you're driving high end headphones. I agree that you need a very high end speaker to notice a difference. But on a decent pair of $80 headphones you already get a benefit from the X-Fi. Good point on the 3D positioning, that's simply unbeatable. On any game with EAX 3 or 5 it's nothing short of awesome. Very scary in Doom III. Audigy 2 is already pretty good though.boniek wrote:You won't be able to hear any differences between audigy and xfi on computer speakers (and even equipped with good speakers you would have to have superhuman hearing abilities). Xfi does not help framerates in any noticeable way. It's just a waste of cash compared to current audigy 2 zs for example. Oh and their drivers in windows are plain pain in the ass (talking about switching to different modes).
You don't have much choice though if you want really good audio positioning with headphones. It's really good in this aspect.

I concur, I have no qualms with closed source drivers so long as they do their job and they do it well enough to make me happy. (Which for right now is for them to exist in the first place and for me to get sound out of them)I'll hold judgement until I see exactly what the quality of the closed source drivers are.