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  2. Sound Blaster X7 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_Blaster_X7

    The Sound Blaster X7 is a USB audio device that can work without a computer. It was announced on 3 September 2014. ... Windows 7 32/64-bit, Windows Vista® 32/64-bit ...

  3. Windows legacy audio components - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_legacy_audio...

    When the sound card uses a custom driver for use with the system supplied port class driver PortCls.sys or implements a mini-driver for use with the streaming class driver, applications can bypass the KMixer completely and use the kernel streaming interfaces instead to directly interact with audio driver and reduce latency. Windows 98 includes ...

  4. Audio Stream Input/Output - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio_Stream_Input/Output

    Audio Stream Input/Output (ASIO) is a computer audio interface driver protocol for digital audio specified by Steinberg, providing high data throughput, synchronization, and low latency between a software application and a computer's audio interface or sound card.

  5. Sound card - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_card

    The USB specification defines a standard interface, the USB audio device class, allowing a single driver to work with the various USB sound devices and interfaces on the market. Mac OS X, Windows, and Linux support this standard. However, some USB sound cards do not conform to the standard and require proprietary drivers from the manufacturer.

  6. Device driver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Device_driver

    Advanced Linux Sound Architecture (ALSA) – the standard Linux sound-driver interface; Scanner Access Now Easy (SANE) – a public-domain interface to raster-image scanner-hardware; Installable File System (IFS) – a filesystem API for IBM OS/2 and Microsoft Windows NT; Open Data-Link Interface (ODI) – network card API similar to NDIS ...

  7. Intel High Definition Audio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_High_Definition_Audio

    The Service Pack 3 update to Windows XP and all later versions of Windows (from Vista onwards) included the Universal Audio Architecture (UAA) class driver, which supported audio devices built to HD Audio's specifications. Retrospective UAA drivers were also built for Windows 2000, Server 2003 and XP Service Pack 1/2.

  8. Sound Blaster Live! - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_Blaster_Live!

    Sound Blaster Live! was the first sound card from Creative with the "What U Hear" recording input source. This was supported in the Windows drivers, so no additional software was needed to utilize it. The analog stereo audio signal that came out of the main Line Out was directed into this input.

  9. Media Control Interface - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Media_Control_Interface

    The Media Control Interface consists of 7 parts: cdaudio; digitalvideo; overlay; sequencer; vcr; videodisc; waveaudio; Each of these so-called MCI devices (e.g. CD-ROM or VCD player) can play a certain type of files, e.g. AVIVideo plays .avi files, CDAudio plays CD-DA tracks among others. Other MCI devices have also been made available over time.