fabiensanglard wrote on 2025-10-12, 07:53:I have installed Windows 98 on my 1997 PC and the option to have audio CD playback handled by Windows is grayed out (see screens […]
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I have installed Windows 98 on my 1997 PC and the option to have audio CD playback handled by Windows is grayed out (see screenshot).
The attachment cd_cannot_play_digital.png is no longer available
1. I have not connected the audio cable from the CD-ROM to the Sound Blaster 16. I assumed, since the CD-ROM is connected to an IDE port, this would not be needed.
2. I have read on other thread that I may have to install a WDM driver. But is it a driver for the CD-ROM or the sound card?
3. How can I check if the driver is WDM or VxD?
4. If I find the WDM driver, do I still need to connect the CD-ROM to the Sound Blaster via the audio cable?
5. I have installed WinAmp 5.35, the latest version compatible with Windows 98 AFAIK. It is able to play audio CD without any driver. How come Windows can't do it then? How is Winamp doing it?
6. Am I misunderstanding this setting? I assumed it was to allow Windows to do like Winamp and playback audio CD from the IDE interface. But it is just a setting so Windows uses the CD-ROM digital output instead of the analog one?
Windows 98SE supports digital CD audio via the IDE interface, meaning it's not necessary to use the audio cable to connect the CD-ROM drive to the sound card. The CPU can handle the digital to analog conversion for the sound card. However, there are a lot of caveats. There will be CPU overhead, which will I think be significant on a PC from 1997. Also, it (typically?) requires using the WDM drivers for the sound card, which will create a lot of compatibility problems.
1) That's right
2) sound card
3) check driver file name - if it's VXD, it will have extension .vxd, I think
4) No cable needed
5) That's strange!
6) No, I don't think you're misunderstanding it.
See this thread, if you haven't already (no solutions there, but might help): Sound Blaster 16 WDM Drivers (attached). Incompatible with DOS games. Please help.
I think it would be unusual on a PC of that era with a SB16 to use the IDE-interface digital audio instead of the analog audio cable. Can I ask if you have a particular reason why you want to do that? If you can even get working WDM drivers for a SB16, you should expect the SB16 to have severe problems with games.
There's also a question of whether your CD-ROM drive even supports it. I don't have any experience with that.
I've basically never used digital audio via IDE on anything earlier than a Pentium 4, as it always made more sense to just use the analog audio cable.
Edit: regarding Winamp, a quick search shows that Winamp may be capable of playing the digital audio via a plugin (perhaps this came pre-installed with the version you have?):
mentioned in passing here:
https://forums.anandtech.com/threads/enabling … in-98se.579252/
https://forums.anandtech.com/threads/how-do-y … dows-98.360436/