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In addition to PCI and PCIe internal sound cards, Creative also released an external USB-based solution (named X-Mod) in November 2006. X-Mod is listed in the same category as the rest of the X-Fi lineup, but is only a stereo device, marketed to improve music playing from laptop computers, and with lower specifications than the internal offerings.
E-MU 20K is the commercial name for a line of audio chips by Creative Technology, commercially known as the Sound Blaster X-Fi chipset. The series comprises the E-MU 20K1 (CA20K1) and E-MU 20K2 (CA20K2) audio chips.
The Audigy 4 (Value) is more in line with the Audigy 2 Value series. The Audigy 4 had a shorter life span than its predecessors, due to the short window between it and the next-generation Sound Blaster X-Fi. Sound Blaster Audigy Rx (September 2013) is similar to the Audigy 4 but with a dedicated 600-ohm headphone amplifier and a PCIe 1x ...
EAX 5.0 is supported by E-mu 20K-based products such as the Sound Blaster X-Fi. 128 simultaneous voices processable in hardware and up to 4 effects on each; EAX Voice (processing of microphone input signal) EAX PurePath (EAX Sound effects can originate from one speaker only) Environment FlexiFX (four available effects slots per channel)
X-Fi may refer to: X-Fi (audio chip) , an audio processor by Creative Labs Sound Blaster X-Fi a line of PC sound cards by Creative Labs utilizing the audio chip of the same name
Sound Blaster X-Fi; Sound card mixer; SoundStorm; T. Thunder Board; Turtle Beach Corporation; W. Windows Sound System
8-channel DAC Cirrus Logic CS4382 placed on Sound Blaster X-Fi Fatal1ty. An important sound card characteristic is polyphony, which refers to its ability to process and output multiple independent voices or sounds simultaneously. These distinct channels are seen as the number of audio outputs, which may correspond to a speaker configuration ...
The Sound Blaster VIBRA 16 was released as a cost-reduced, more integrated Sound Blaster 16 chipset targeting OEMs and the entry-level to mid-range markets. Some variants support Plug and Play for Microsoft Windows operating systems. It lacked separate bass, treble and gain control (except CT2502 chip), and an ASP/CSP socket.