Monday, June 29th 2009
Auzentech Announces Shipment Dates for X-Fi HomeTheater HD
Auzentech, Inc. announced shipment dates today for the highly-anticipated X-Fi HomeTheater HD sound card. Reviewer shipments of the X-Fi HomeTheater HD will begin the second week of July. According to Auzentech the sound card will also go into full production at that time, enabling customer shipments to begin at the end of July.
"We are excited to officially announce shipment dates of the X-Fi HomeTheater HD sound card," said Stephane Bae, president of Auzentech, Inc. "We appreciate the patience of all our customers, distributors, and dealers who have waited anxiously for this sound card."The release of the X-Fi HomeTheater HD sound card to reviewers and customers follows the completion of several rounds of testing by Auzentech staff to match the sound card to a full spectrum of home theater equipment. Auzentech reports that because the X-Fi HomeTheater HD is "a groundbreaking product in the home theater sound card space," its staff will actively support reviewers as they perform their tests.
The X-Fi HomeTheater HD is the result of cooperation between several companies that include Auzentech, Creative Labs, Cyberlink, and Silicon Image.
Source:
Auzentech
"We are excited to officially announce shipment dates of the X-Fi HomeTheater HD sound card," said Stephane Bae, president of Auzentech, Inc. "We appreciate the patience of all our customers, distributors, and dealers who have waited anxiously for this sound card."The release of the X-Fi HomeTheater HD sound card to reviewers and customers follows the completion of several rounds of testing by Auzentech staff to match the sound card to a full spectrum of home theater equipment. Auzentech reports that because the X-Fi HomeTheater HD is "a groundbreaking product in the home theater sound card space," its staff will actively support reviewers as they perform their tests.
The X-Fi HomeTheater HD is the result of cooperation between several companies that include Auzentech, Creative Labs, Cyberlink, and Silicon Image.
21 Comments on Auzentech Announces Shipment Dates for X-Fi HomeTheater HD
it'd be damn nice if TPU had their own reviewers for audio hardware :ohwell:
that's about the same as measuring a GPUs FPS in games . . .
LANPARTY DK 790FX-M2RS
# Realtek ALC885 8-channel HD Audio Codec
# High-performance DACs with 106dB dynamic range (A-Weight), ADCs with 101dB dynamic range (A-Weight)
I would get it of egg just to try it out then just pay the restocking fee's after.
The coaxial port has an adapter for an optical cable.
Link
Scroll down to the fourth image from the bottom, for the image next to this text:
It actualy comes with the card though, and you can then use any normal toslink cable with it.
Back on topic: Any word on price? This will be my card next year when I rebuild my main rig, and retire this rig to HTPC/TV Gamer/Server duty, provided the price isn't too steep.
damnit auzentech, leave my home out of this :( what did it do to you.
:respect: auzentech
Lets say I have an A/V processor (or receiver) that supports the new lossless formats and I have the PC set to send sound and video over HDMI.
What will this offer versus the current sound card (on-board, cheap) that will pass the signal out over the HDMI? (assuming I have the source player set to "pass through" mode?
Is the only difference the "quality" i.e. the S/N ratio etc. of the stream between it being opened by the player and sent to the HDMI?
I can see where this would be good if you have the speakers connected by analogue to the pre-in of your receiver or straight to a power amp, or if your current receiver does not support some format, so the card decodes it rather than a CPU bound codec, but am not seeing (other than the quality question) where it has a benefit when using pass-through.
Someone please enlighten me. :)
I beleive the point of this is that you can use a HDMI cable from your video card to your sound card to your home theater system, so that your sound card does the audio and not your video card.
However, this sound cards main draw is digital output, and unmolested audio (so no processing) so the "sound quality" is really coming from your receiver. This cards job is to just offload HDMI audio out of your PC with as little change as possible. If you have a high quality HDMI capable receiver attached to your PC, and good speakers, it's probably going to sound great. If you buy this card and then plug in speakers or headphones, that's quite a waste, I would recommend other soundcards (include other models from Auzentech) that will produce as good or better analog output.
ASUS has a similar card out that is the only currently available model that can do true PC Blu-Ray playback with all the audio options, uncompressed, non-downsampled, and with bitstreaming options for the new Dolby and DTS MA lossless codecs.
ATI video cards come close, they can do lossless 7.1 audio as well, however not with commercial blu-rays. There are workarounds that involve decryption and ripping, but these two cards (the ASUS and Auzentech) will be the only PC options to allow you to play commercial Blu-Rays from your PC with full non-downsampled audio, without using any hacks or decrypters.