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Intel High Definition Audio (IHDA) (also called HD Audio or development codename Azalia) is a specification for the audio sub-system of personal computers. It was released by Intel in 2004 as the successor to their AC'97 PC audio standard.
A number of outside parties has released free drivers for the Sound Blaster Live! cards e.g. kxproject. These Drivers offer more control over the DSP. For details on the original Live! including the Gold edition, marketing strategy, and design faults, see Sound Blaster Live! (Original)
Sound card Mozart 16 for ISA-16 bus A Turtle Beach sound card for PCI bus Echo Digital Audio's Indigo IO – PCMCIA card-bit 96 kHz stereo in/out sound card A VIA Technologies Envy sound card for PC, 5.1 channel for PCI slot. Sound cards for IBM PC–compatible computers were very uncommon until 1988.
the sound card driver and management system in the Linux kernel: GPL-2.0-or-later LGPL-2.1-or-later: aRts: Yes an audio programming API and sound server for general desktop, no longer in development GPL: DSSI: Yes a plugin architecture for software synthesizers: LGPL-2.1-or-later: GStreamer: Yes Yes Yes Yes a graph-based multimedia framework ...
Most free and open-source graphics device drivers are developed by the Mesa project. The driver is made up of a compiler, a rendering API, and software which manages access to the graphics hardware. Drivers without freely (and legally) -available source code are commonly known as binary drivers.
DirectSound is a deprecated software component of the Microsoft DirectX library for the Windows operating system, superseded by XAudio2.It provides a low-latency interface to sound card drivers written for Windows 95 through Windows XP and can handle the mixing and recording of multiple audio streams.
Pages in category "Sound cards" The following 53 pages are in this category, out of 53 total. ... IBM Music Feature Card; Innovation SSI-2001; Intel High Definition ...
Intel released FreeBSD drivers for some networking cards, [306] available under a BSD-compatible license, [307] which were also ported to OpenBSD. [307] Binary firmware files for non-wireless Ethernet devices were also released under a BSD licence allowing free redistribution. [308] Intel ran the Moblin project until April 23, 2009, when they ...