Niels Mayer wrote: > http://www.esi-audio.com/products/esp1010e/ > > This looks suspiciously like an ice1712 and not ice1724 (like on the > ESI juli@/maya) given that it tops out at 96K in a time when HD > fashion demands 192K... Also the two midi ports, and 8 I/O's and > SPDIF, just like ice1712 (?): > http://www.via.com.tw/en/products/audio/controllers/envy24/ > > But on a PCIe bus? In theory, it would be possible to put a PCIe/PCI bridge chip on the card, like with the Xonar DX/D2X/STX. However, the driver's .inf file says that the PCI vendor ID of the controller chip is not 1412 (IC Ensemble) or 1106 (Via) but 19FE, which, according to <http://www.pcisig.com/membership/vid_search/>, does not exist. However, Google reveals that the chip is a Tenor TE7000L, made by Galaxy Far East Corp., who should be well-known to anybody serious about pro-audio. ;-) <http://www.gfec.com.tw/ics.php> (The ESP1010e proves that this chip actually exists; I wouldn't have deduced this from the pictures of their PCI audio chips, which are actually pictures of the TE7029L with different chip numbers photoshopped in.) To answer your question: That web site says "PCI driver ready – Linux, Windows". I'm not sure what "ready" is supposed to mean, but it certainly doesn't mean "can be simply downloaded". Try asking GFEC and ESI. Regards, Clemens ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ This SF.net email is sponsored by Make an app they can't live without Enter the BlackBerry Developer Challenge http://p.sf.net/sfu/RIM-dev2dev _______________________________________________ Alsa-user mailing list Alsa-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/alsa-user