RetroGamer4Ever wrote on 2026-03-17, 15:06:
USB Audio is listed in the specs, so it likely is as you say. Most USB audio stuff is inexpensive - by design and intention - and built on older chips, so you won't find much that can go against the Fx Pro around that price, though there are some competitive 5.1/7.1 options out there, just not with the fancy digital audio fluff that the discrete card has.
Now I think the reason behind this kind of USB-audio-behind-PCIe-USB-controller "discrete" card is indeed cost. With whatever USB audio solutions on the market as well as a decent PCIe XHCI controller there's no need to invent a new native design. Most modern OSes already have class drivers for USB Audio, so these kind of devices, be it an external USB audio device, or an "internal sound card", would "just work" in these places for basic functionalities, with "drivers" that are simply software meant to control special features in the device.
PS: Turned out ALC4082 is actually being used on some very recent mobos for the onboard solution as well. I wonder what this would mean for those motherboards regarding toggling onboard USB (EHCI/XHCI) controllers, now that onboard audio is USB instead of HDA.
DracoNihil wrote on 2026-03-18, 08:45:UCyborg wrote on 2026-03-16, 20:59:
Another one supporting high KHz output. Does anyone even hear the difference, assuming you can come across such content?
Probably the only way to test 192000 Hz and such sampling rates is in the realm of audio synthesis. Especially when resampling algorithms come into play.
Some audio stores do offer 96kHz FLAC option. As for 192kHz and higher, I haven't come by any.
UCyborg wrote on 2026-03-18, 12:26:Interesting that they came up with another internal card at all.
Guess the possibility of a refreshed X-Fi model (like they did for Audigy with Rx variant) is out of the picture at this point.
EMU10K (Live!/Audigy) has excellent feature support across a wide range of OSes, with most if not all hardware features available. EMU20K (X-Fi) on the other hand has only basic support in Linux (without any hardware feature such as synths) and that's it.
And it doesn't have to be Creative themselves to refresh those models. Aside from the official Audigy Rx, EMU10K has already been unofficially refreshed via so-called "Sound Blessed" clones, even with PCIe options. These cards work just like the originals they're meant to imitate.
I'm still curious what exactly is EMU20K compared to EMU10K, and how does some of these cards' features, like the onboard X-RAM, actually work. Unless support for EMU20K hardware features across other OSes becomes possible, as well as getting a kX-like treatment for Windows, I doubt there would be enough interest for new EMU20K-based solutions like EMU10K.