Oh man the sb pci 512 would take midi sounds from wmp files and make them sound beautiful unlike the ac97 codecs. Now there are no drivers for that card.
There's good software MIDI synthesizers available now but they're kind of a pain to install. I'd argue they're as good as the old hardware MIDI synths.
Oh my god, you're literally still going on about THD, SNR, Hz and dB.
Actually it's very relevant to THX. The whole idea of a good sound system is to be able to put out massive decibels without hearing any noise. Noise ruins everything.
It's what gives games believable realistic sounding audio, not SNR of 130dB at 3 billion Hz.
They both matter. If you have crappy speakers, everything sounds like crap. The game engine is in a far better position to do environmental audio rendering than a sound card anyway because it has all of the data to do it.
I think you should spend some time reading about EAX...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_Audio_Extensions
...it was literally just effects applied to the DirectSound3D stream. DirectSound3D did all of the computations. DirectSound3D is now depreciated because the bulk of games do it themselves.
Yes! More lipstick on the pig
ANY form of 'digital' audio is lossy. Sound is analogue by nature.
Analog is not sharp though and degrades over space. This is why ATSC has killed NTSC. Why HDMI killed coax. Why DVI/DisplayPort killed VGA.
Technically you are right...it's not the same and some nuances are lost in that process.
It's true that the soundcard market died because 95%+ of the market is fine with the quality of onboard sound. It also didn't help that Creative Labs and company was stagnant in r+d for many years and put out poor products that weren't noticeably better than onboard sound. Meanwhile, onboard sound continued to improve. CL got off track with some of their products too like developing features that had no support, or didn't deliver. And they had that X-gamer thing (I forget the name) that was supposed to improve game performance which ended up doing nothing and flopping.
But, I still wish there were a vendor out there developing higher quality sound products for PCs for the niche that can tell the difference. Right now it's either having to go with onboard sound, or go full-bore professional musician level stuff that is insanely expensive (and really designed more for handling high-quality input than output). I guarantee if a vendor came up with a $75-$150 card that truly gave noticeably higher quality than onboard sound to the average user they would sell quite a few of them. Twitch streamers would likely love them, and viewers would snap them up after that. But maybe the technology just isn't there to do that.
Creative should have competed with Realtek and VIA to get their chips built into motherboards. Too little too late.
I found many times over the years that SDIF is much fuller sound than HDMI. Although problems have been less noticed with HDMI but the quality just is not there.
Using DTS? If yes, you're hearing the DSP (digital signal processor) tamper with the stream. What you're hearing with HDMI is what was actually recorded.
I don't think that's true, but I don't have time to dig info up right now.
"S/PDIF can carry two channels of uncompressed PCM audio or compressed 5.1/7.1 surround sound (such as DTS audio codec); it cannot support lossless formats (such as Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio) that require greater bandwidth[2] like that available with HDMI or DisplayPort."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S/PDIF
"For digital audio, if an HDMI device has audio, it is required to implement the baseline format: stereo (uncompressed) PCM. Other formats are optional, with HDMI allowing up to 8 channels of uncompressed audio at sample sizes of 16-bit, 20-bit and 24-bit, with sample rates of 32 kHz, 44.1 kHz, 48 kHz, 88.2 kHz, 96 kHz, 176.4 kHz and 192 kHz.[6](§7) HDMI also carries any IEC 61937-compliant compressed audio stream, such as Dolby Digital and DTS, and up to 8 channels of one-bit DSD audio (used on Super Audio CDs) at rates up to four times that of Super Audio CD.[6](§7) With version 1.3, HDMI allows lossless compressed audio streams Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HDMI#Audio.2Fvideo
The only advantage of S/PDIF is optical which electrically isolates the DAC/amp hardware.