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hi krispen, my thinkpad makes little chirping noises on the headphone output. seems to come from the harddisc. is audible silence. that's why i never even considered using it for music. tilmann ----- Original Message ----- From: "Krispen Hartung" <khartung@cableone.net> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> Sent: Monday, July 30, 2007 6:27 AM Subject: Re: Low Lantecy Soundcard for Laptop Gig > ----- Original Message ----- > >> It's true about the line level. I have a dual channel mic pre that is >> pretty quiet that I use. But I'm surprised that you find the internal >> sound of your ThinkPad to be on par with the Indigo-- my feeling is that >> the A/D and amps in the Indigo are far cleaner than anything you can >find >> in a stock laptop. .. maybe your ThinkPad is an unusual creature? > > All I can think of is that most all the PC notebooks out today with >Intel > duo core > processors have the sound integrated into their motherboard with the > chipset, > rather than a separate "sound card". It's their integrated HD (high > definition) > audio, and I can say at least that the output is superior to other >prior, > stock > sound cards in PC laptops. I'm not sure about the input, but in my case >it > sounds pretty damn good with the "ASIO for All" driver. The standard > driver > sounds like crap, but this is no reflection on the hardware. I think >this > is where > there is a lot of confusion. A poor driver can make just about any piece > of > hardware (external or internal) sound bad. That being said, >theoretically, > I > can't tell any difference between the small cardbus Indigo unit and the > integrated > HD audio of the ThinkPad...it's all just hardware and software, and the > advantage > of the integrated audio is that there is no intermediate device (the > cardbus and its > transfer rate)...I have to believe that the speed of the transference of > data on the > motherboard for the HD audio is much faster than the cardbus. > >>> Really? Is this because of the speed of firewire? I thought the newer >>> firewire was a lot faster than cardbus. >> >> Faster in terms of bandwidth, yes. More data can fly down that new >> firewire pipe. But as I recall, firewire sends things in packets, and >> there are interrupts and delivery mechanisms within the hardware and >> software that add a translation layer so that the data has to jump >> through >> more hoops before it reaches the audio application. So, more bandwidth >> but >> lower latency. CardBus is a more direct connection with the processor. > > Gotch ya. > > Kris >