The ESS Solo-1E was marketed as a chip for laptops. I guess the "E" stands for "Embedded". I looked at the datasheets between the ES1938 and the ES1946, and found them to be pin-compatible. I don't know what else is different about them.
I bought these from a Chinese seller on eBay and got a mix between Solo-1E and Allegro-1E. The output from them is not great, and some of them had garbled audio or were dead. Others that were dead started working again later, so I can't speak for their reliability. Some of them were also damaged; one had a broken SMD capacitor, and another had a bent pin on the QFP that was shorting against itz neighbor.
I had problems trying to use these with VXD drivers, as they would cause my system to lock up. They worked with the WDM drivers though, but this loses Adlib/ESFM in Windows, at which point you may as well use an Ensoniq or Creative.
I salvaged a genuine ES1938 from a dead motherboard that I'm going to try swapping onto one of all else fails to see if this will bring it back to life.
If anyone plans to buy these, my recommendation is to to buy a bunch of them, to sort through the broken ones, and hope for a Solo-1 amongst the Allegros. But at that point you may as well have bought a proper Solo-1 from another seller. Also note that you also lose the gameport option on these.
This one is already dead, so I have nothing to lose by trying to fix it.
See attached for the two datasheets.