>From what I recall James talking about it, you should go to Windowsand switch the mode in Windows driver, and reboot. But I might besaying totally wrong, since I'm talking from what I remember. It wassomewhere in the mailing list, I can't find it right now. Driver for HDA Intel mode of Creative cards is in Takashi'ssound-unstable-2.6 tree, it's called patch_ca0110.c - see here:http://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/tiwai/sound-unstable-2.6.git;a=blob;f=sound/pci/hda/patch_ca0110.c;hb=HEAD 2008/10/6 Ted T. Logian <tedtheologian@xxxxxxxxx>:> Supposedly this compatability mode exists, but how do you turn it on?> Do you then just start using hda-intel afterward?>> I also understand it's severely limited.>>>> On Mon, 2008-10-06 at 10:35 +0200, Vedran Miletić wrote:>>> To say that this driver is partially working is an overstatement. It>> is partially working on very few supported cards, and some of them are>> supported by ALSA as well, if not better (Xtreme Audio PCI and Xtreme>> Audio PCI-E).>>>> By the way, don't all X-Fi cards have some kind of HDA-compatible>> mode? If yes, why don't people just use that until Creative writes a>> driver and stop complaining?>>>> 2008/10/6 Brendan Pike <spike@xxxxxxxxxx>:>> > Nobody with know-how has bothered to port the partially working oss4>> > driver to ALSA, so interest is quite low.>>>>>>> _______________________________________________> Alsa-devel mailing list> Alsa-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> http://mailman.alsa-project.org/mailman/listinfo/alsa-devel> -- Vedran Miletić_______________________________________________Alsa-devel mailing listAlsa-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx://mailman.alsa-project.org/mailman/listinfo/alsa-devel