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I recommend you read the information at http://www.guillemot.com. Their soundcard is pretty decent. I purchased their Home Studio thing. Since I don't have other software like Cubase or Cakewalk, I don't know if they have any issues with this soundcard; however, the recording program called Quartz SE it comes with is so-so. Anyway, it is said not to rely heavily on your CPU. For the money, I think it's a bargain. I found the best price at http://www.necx.com. I used to have a Cyrix P166+ (so-called P133) and really slow old-style IDE hard drive, a Quantum BigFoot. Since then I've upgraded to an Asus TX-97E motherboard with a Pentium 233MMX and a Western Digital Ultra-DMA 6.3-GB hard drive, as well as a Maxtor Ultra-DMA 11-GB hard drive, and this things rocks. I'm now considering that new AMD P300 "2" CPU they got out that fits in my Socket-7 type of plug for the CPU. That should really speed it all up. However, I'm also considering it may make more sense to buy a whole new computer with a Pentium II 400 MHz. They are really fast. This month they started building 450-MHz computers. | -----Original Message----- | From: Steve Lauder [mailto:steve.lauder@elspa.com] | Sent: Friday 21 August 1998 1:46 AM | To: Loopers-Delight@annihilist.com | Subject: Re: Home Studio | | | >Today, I went and picked up the Soundblaster 128PCI soundcard... | | | Great! Do you think you could let me know how you get on with it? I'm | itching to upgrade my AWE 64, but I'm looking for the right card to do it | with. The main thing I'm concerned about is how heavily it relies on the | CPU for its operations. | | I run a P166MMX (6 months ago it sounded like a dream machine, | now it sounds | like I need to upgrade!), and even a simple task such as playing | a music CD | whilst playing Quake causes considerable system slowdown. | | - Steve | |