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#1
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- Can I still have a MIDI port without SoundBlaster? (TAKE 2)
I guess the answer is no, huh?
"Bern Harrison" wrote in message ... I have 2 audio cards... an SBLive original, and an Echo Gina. My computer occasionally freezes when both are used together (when my music editing program is open -- so I'm assuming this is what causes the freezes) -- and I'd really like to get rid of my SBLive... but then I'd have no MIDI ports to plug my music keyboard into. Is there an alternative for me? Or maybe someone can help me figure out why my computer locks up when I'm editing music and using both cards simultaneously. Could it be an IRQ thing? I know nothing about IRQs, but I do know an abnormal amount of devices (5 if I recall) are sharing IRQ 9 during boot-up. I'm using WinXP SP1 with all the patches, AMD Thunderbird 1ghz. |
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#2
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- Can I still have a MIDI port without SoundBlaster? (TAKE 2)
"Bern Harrison" wrote in message
... I guess the answer is no, huh? The answer is actually yes. This particular machine doesn't have a MIDI port, so I added a MidiMan MidiSport USB 1x adapter to run my POD2. It works very well and was not expensive. I also used that adapter on a previous machine that wouldn't allow the SB MIDI port to work. And yes, the freeze sounds to me like some sort of contention issue. HTH -pk "Bern Harrison" wrote in message ... I have 2 audio cards... an SBLive original, and an Echo Gina. My computer occasionally freezes when both are used together (when my music editing program is open -- so I'm assuming this is what causes the freezes) -- and I'd really like to get rid of my SBLive... but then I'd have no MIDI ports to plug my music keyboard into. Is there an alternative for me? Or maybe someone can help me figure out why my computer locks up when I'm editing music and using both cards simultaneously. Could it be an IRQ thing? I know nothing about IRQs, but I do know an abnormal amount of devices (5 if I recall) are sharing IRQ 9 during boot-up. I'm using WinXP SP1 with all the patches, AMD Thunderbird 1ghz. |
#3
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- Can I still have a MIDI port without SoundBlaster? (TAKE 2)
"Bern Harrison" wrote in message
... I guess the answer is no, huh? The answer is actually yes. This particular machine doesn't have a MIDI port, so I added a MidiMan MidiSport USB 1x adapter to run my POD2. It works very well and was not expensive. I also used that adapter on a previous machine that wouldn't allow the SB MIDI port to work. And yes, the freeze sounds to me like some sort of contention issue. HTH -pk "Bern Harrison" wrote in message ... I have 2 audio cards... an SBLive original, and an Echo Gina. My computer occasionally freezes when both are used together (when my music editing program is open -- so I'm assuming this is what causes the freezes) -- and I'd really like to get rid of my SBLive... but then I'd have no MIDI ports to plug my music keyboard into. Is there an alternative for me? Or maybe someone can help me figure out why my computer locks up when I'm editing music and using both cards simultaneously. Could it be an IRQ thing? I know nothing about IRQs, but I do know an abnormal amount of devices (5 if I recall) are sharing IRQ 9 during boot-up. I'm using WinXP SP1 with all the patches, AMD Thunderbird 1ghz. |
#4
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- Can I still have a MIDI port without SoundBlaster? (TAKE 2)
Bitstring , from the wonderful
person Bern Harrison said I guess the answer is no, huh? It depends on the motherboard/computer as much as anything .. sharing an IRQ is not a problem (with Win2k you could find a dozen or more things sharing IRQ9), although a more modern mobo will have IRQs up to 23-or-so, so less sharing is needed. Worst that will happen is that some devices will be a bit slow responding to an interrupt (since the dozen different drivers all get called sequentially until one of them goes 'Bingo! this IRQ9 request is from MY device'). Creative SB drivers are the pits IME, and not good at IRQ sharing - with SBLive cards part of the problem was the hardware, which makes silly demands on PCI bus timings. Via chipset motherboards of the KT133a generation (about right for your CPU age) had massive problems with PCI bus latency, corrupting both the sound, and also other DMA transfers (trashing disk data was a favourite). Later OS and BIOS patches worked around this, but never really fixed it (My opinion again). So possible solutions - revert to WinXP 'standard' driver for the SBLive, if you installed Creative ones. This loses you the rear channel sound, and probably some other features, and may not fix the problem. Dump the SB Live, as you say, and try something newer. Or (would be my favourite - heck, I did it) dump the whole motherboard for something with an nForce2 chipset, with built-in Soundstorm/MIDI support on the motherboard (but if you are running PC133 memory, you'll need to upgrade to PC2100 or PC2700 DDR at the same time .. be sort of tempting to spend $100 on a faster CPU too .. yes?). That eliminated both the motherboard chipset and the SBLive problems in one swell foop. 8. "Bern Harrison" wrote in message ... I have 2 audio cards... an SBLive original, and an Echo Gina. My computer occasionally freezes when both are used together (when my music editing program is open -- so I'm assuming this is what causes the freezes) -- and I'd really like to get rid of my SBLive... but then I'd have no MIDI ports to plug my music keyboard into. Is there an alternative for me? Or maybe someone can help me figure out why my computer locks up when I'm editing music and using both cards simultaneously. Could it be an IRQ thing? I know nothing about IRQs, but I do know an abnormal amount of devices (5 if I recall) are sharing IRQ 9 during boot-up. I'm using WinXP SP1 with all the patches, AMD Thunderbird 1ghz. -- GSV Three Minds in a Can Outgoing Msgs are Turing Tested,and indistinguishable from human typing. |
#5
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- Can I still have a MIDI port without SoundBlaster? (TAKE 2)
Bitstring , from the wonderful
person Bern Harrison said I guess the answer is no, huh? It depends on the motherboard/computer as much as anything .. sharing an IRQ is not a problem (with Win2k you could find a dozen or more things sharing IRQ9), although a more modern mobo will have IRQs up to 23-or-so, so less sharing is needed. Worst that will happen is that some devices will be a bit slow responding to an interrupt (since the dozen different drivers all get called sequentially until one of them goes 'Bingo! this IRQ9 request is from MY device'). Creative SB drivers are the pits IME, and not good at IRQ sharing - with SBLive cards part of the problem was the hardware, which makes silly demands on PCI bus timings. Via chipset motherboards of the KT133a generation (about right for your CPU age) had massive problems with PCI bus latency, corrupting both the sound, and also other DMA transfers (trashing disk data was a favourite). Later OS and BIOS patches worked around this, but never really fixed it (My opinion again). So possible solutions - revert to WinXP 'standard' driver for the SBLive, if you installed Creative ones. This loses you the rear channel sound, and probably some other features, and may not fix the problem. Dump the SB Live, as you say, and try something newer. Or (would be my favourite - heck, I did it) dump the whole motherboard for something with an nForce2 chipset, with built-in Soundstorm/MIDI support on the motherboard (but if you are running PC133 memory, you'll need to upgrade to PC2100 or PC2700 DDR at the same time .. be sort of tempting to spend $100 on a faster CPU too .. yes?). That eliminated both the motherboard chipset and the SBLive problems in one swell foop. 8. "Bern Harrison" wrote in message ... I have 2 audio cards... an SBLive original, and an Echo Gina. My computer occasionally freezes when both are used together (when my music editing program is open -- so I'm assuming this is what causes the freezes) -- and I'd really like to get rid of my SBLive... but then I'd have no MIDI ports to plug my music keyboard into. Is there an alternative for me? Or maybe someone can help me figure out why my computer locks up when I'm editing music and using both cards simultaneously. Could it be an IRQ thing? I know nothing about IRQs, but I do know an abnormal amount of devices (5 if I recall) are sharing IRQ 9 during boot-up. I'm using WinXP SP1 with all the patches, AMD Thunderbird 1ghz. -- GSV Three Minds in a Can Outgoing Msgs are Turing Tested,and indistinguishable from human typing. |
#6
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- Can I still have a MIDI port without SoundBlaster? (TAKE 2)
"Bern Harrison" wrote in message
... I have 2 audio cards... an SBLive original, and an Echo Gina. My computer occasionally freezes when both are used together (when my music editing program is open -- so I'm assuming this is what causes the freezes) -- and I'd really like to get rid of my SBLive... but then I'd have no MIDI ports to plug my music keyboard into. Is there an alternative for me? Or maybe someone can help me figure out why my computer locks up when I'm editing music and using both cards simultaneously. Could it be an IRQ thing? I know nothing about IRQs, but I do know an abnormal amount of devices (5 if I recall) are sharing IRQ 9 during boot-up. I'm using WinXP SP1 with all the patches, AMD Thunderbird 1ghz. "Bern Harrison" wrote in message ... I guess the answer is no, huh? The answer is actually yes. This particular machine doesn't have a MIDI port, so I added a MidiMan MidiSport USB 1x adapter to run my POD2. It works very well and was not expensive. I also used that adapter on a previous machine that wouldn't allow the SB MIDI port to work. And yes, the freeze sounds to me like some sort of contention issue. HTH -pk [rearranged to combat top-posting...] I didn't see this first time around. There are probably easier ways of doing this, but you need to get to device manager and look at your hardware to see if you have any yellow ! signs that may indicate contention. I know best the way under windows 98, which works quite well under XP. I have not yet mastered the XP menu system to my liking. Start control panel and select 'classic view'. Double-click on 'system', click on 'hardware', click on 'device manager'. Look for 'sound.... devices' and click on the + sign. See if any of the entries have a yellow sign next to them. If so, click on that device and look at the top for 'properties'. XP will tell you what is wrong and maybe how to fix it. There may even be a fix-it wizard. I have not had any hardware contention so I cannot say for sure. -- wrmst rgrds Robin Bignall Remote Hertfordshire England http://homepage.ntlworld.com/docrobin/homepage.htm |
#7
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- Can I still have a MIDI port without SoundBlaster? (TAKE 2)
"Bern Harrison" wrote in message
... I have 2 audio cards... an SBLive original, and an Echo Gina. My computer occasionally freezes when both are used together (when my music editing program is open -- so I'm assuming this is what causes the freezes) -- and I'd really like to get rid of my SBLive... but then I'd have no MIDI ports to plug my music keyboard into. Is there an alternative for me? Or maybe someone can help me figure out why my computer locks up when I'm editing music and using both cards simultaneously. Could it be an IRQ thing? I know nothing about IRQs, but I do know an abnormal amount of devices (5 if I recall) are sharing IRQ 9 during boot-up. I'm using WinXP SP1 with all the patches, AMD Thunderbird 1ghz. "Bern Harrison" wrote in message ... I guess the answer is no, huh? The answer is actually yes. This particular machine doesn't have a MIDI port, so I added a MidiMan MidiSport USB 1x adapter to run my POD2. It works very well and was not expensive. I also used that adapter on a previous machine that wouldn't allow the SB MIDI port to work. And yes, the freeze sounds to me like some sort of contention issue. HTH -pk [rearranged to combat top-posting...] I didn't see this first time around. There are probably easier ways of doing this, but you need to get to device manager and look at your hardware to see if you have any yellow ! signs that may indicate contention. I know best the way under windows 98, which works quite well under XP. I have not yet mastered the XP menu system to my liking. Start control panel and select 'classic view'. Double-click on 'system', click on 'hardware', click on 'device manager'. Look for 'sound.... devices' and click on the + sign. See if any of the entries have a yellow sign next to them. If so, click on that device and look at the top for 'properties'. XP will tell you what is wrong and maybe how to fix it. There may even be a fix-it wizard. I have not had any hardware contention so I cannot say for sure. -- wrmst rgrds Robin Bignall Remote Hertfordshire England http://homepage.ntlworld.com/docrobin/homepage.htm |
#8
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- Can I still have a MIDI port without SoundBlaster? (TAKE 2)
So there is such a thing as a USB MIDI cable?
Or is it a USB Game cable, makeshifted into a USB MIDI cable via an additional adapter of somekind? If the former rather than the latter, could you tell me the name of the exact product and company? "Patrick Keenan" wrote in message . .. "Bern Harrison" wrote in message ... I guess the answer is no, huh? The answer is actually yes. This particular machine doesn't have a MIDI port, so I added a MidiMan MidiSport USB 1x adapter to run my POD2. It works very well and was not expensive. I also used that adapter on a previous machine that wouldn't allow the SB MIDI port to work. And yes, the freeze sounds to me like some sort of contention issue. HTH -pk |
#9
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- Can I still have a MIDI port without SoundBlaster? (TAKE 2)
So there is such a thing as a USB MIDI cable?
Or is it a USB Game cable, makeshifted into a USB MIDI cable via an additional adapter of somekind? If the former rather than the latter, could you tell me the name of the exact product and company? "Patrick Keenan" wrote in message . .. "Bern Harrison" wrote in message ... I guess the answer is no, huh? The answer is actually yes. This particular machine doesn't have a MIDI port, so I added a MidiMan MidiSport USB 1x adapter to run my POD2. It works very well and was not expensive. I also used that adapter on a previous machine that wouldn't allow the SB MIDI port to work. And yes, the freeze sounds to me like some sort of contention issue. HTH -pk |
#10
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- Can I still have a MIDI port without SoundBlaster? (TAKE 2)
Thanks but XP reports all devices as present and working fine.
The lock-up issues occur only in my music editing program... I'm guessing it's somekind of IRQ problem, with both audio cards on IRQ 9 (as well as 2-3 other devices, if you believe the boot-up screen). But I don't know enough about IRQ to say. "Dr Robin Bignall" wrote in message ... Start control panel and select 'classic view'. Double-click on 'system', click on 'hardware', click on 'device manager'. Look for 'sound.... devices' and click on the + sign. See if any of the entries have a yellow sign next to them. If so, click on that device and look at the top for 'properties'. XP will tell you what is wrong and maybe how to fix it. There may even be a fix-it wizard. I have not had any hardware contention so I cannot say for sure. |
#11
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- Can I still have a MIDI port without SoundBlaster? (TAKE 2)
Thanks but XP reports all devices as present and working fine.
The lock-up issues occur only in my music editing program... I'm guessing it's somekind of IRQ problem, with both audio cards on IRQ 9 (as well as 2-3 other devices, if you believe the boot-up screen). But I don't know enough about IRQ to say. "Dr Robin Bignall" wrote in message ... Start control panel and select 'classic view'. Double-click on 'system', click on 'hardware', click on 'device manager'. Look for 'sound.... devices' and click on the + sign. See if any of the entries have a yellow sign next to them. If so, click on that device and look at the top for 'properties'. XP will tell you what is wrong and maybe how to fix it. There may even be a fix-it wizard. I have not had any hardware contention so I cannot say for sure. |
#12
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- Can I still have a MIDI port without SoundBlaster? (TAKE 2)
On Sat, 5 Apr 2003 22:46:51 +0100, GSV Three Minds in a Can
] wrote: Bitstring , from the wonderful person Bern Harrison said I guess the answer is no, huh? It depends on the motherboard/computer as much as anything .. sharing an IRQ is not a problem (with Win2k you could find a dozen or more things sharing IRQ9), although a more modern mobo will have IRQs up to 23-or-so, so less sharing is needed. Worst that will happen is that some devices will be a bit slow responding to an interrupt (since the dozen different drivers all get called sequentially until one of them goes 'Bingo! this IRQ9 request is from MY device'). Creative SB drivers are the pits IME, and not good at IRQ sharing - with SBLive cards part of the problem was the hardware, which makes silly demands on PCI bus timings. Via chipset motherboards of the KT133a generation (about right for your CPU age) had massive problems with PCI bus latency, corrupting both the sound, and also other DMA transfers (trashing disk data was a favourite). Later OS and BIOS patches worked around this, but never really fixed it (My opinion again). So possible solutions - revert to WinXP 'standard' driver for the SBLive, if you installed Creative ones. This loses you the rear channel sound, and probably some other features, and may not fix the problem. Dump the SB Live, as you say, and try something newer. Or (would be my favourite - heck, I did it) dump the whole motherboard for something with an nForce2 chipset, with built-in Soundstorm/MIDI support on the motherboard (but if you are running PC133 memory, you'll need to upgrade to PC2100 or PC2700 DDR at the same time .. be sort of tempting to spend $100 on a faster CPU too .. yes?). That eliminated both the motherboard chipset and the SBLive problems in one swell foop. Gosh! If I was *really* into Hi Fi I'd be tempted to throw away the P4 system I built in December and do as you suggest just for the sheer pleasure of having all of that beautiful kit! Thanks for making my afternoon with a wonderful post... -- wrmst rgrds Robin Bignall Remote Hertfordshire England http://homepage.ntlworld.com/docrobin/homepage.htm |
#13
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- Can I still have a MIDI port without SoundBlaster? (TAKE 2)
On Sat, 5 Apr 2003 22:46:51 +0100, GSV Three Minds in a Can
] wrote: Bitstring , from the wonderful person Bern Harrison said I guess the answer is no, huh? It depends on the motherboard/computer as much as anything .. sharing an IRQ is not a problem (with Win2k you could find a dozen or more things sharing IRQ9), although a more modern mobo will have IRQs up to 23-or-so, so less sharing is needed. Worst that will happen is that some devices will be a bit slow responding to an interrupt (since the dozen different drivers all get called sequentially until one of them goes 'Bingo! this IRQ9 request is from MY device'). Creative SB drivers are the pits IME, and not good at IRQ sharing - with SBLive cards part of the problem was the hardware, which makes silly demands on PCI bus timings. Via chipset motherboards of the KT133a generation (about right for your CPU age) had massive problems with PCI bus latency, corrupting both the sound, and also other DMA transfers (trashing disk data was a favourite). Later OS and BIOS patches worked around this, but never really fixed it (My opinion again). So possible solutions - revert to WinXP 'standard' driver for the SBLive, if you installed Creative ones. This loses you the rear channel sound, and probably some other features, and may not fix the problem. Dump the SB Live, as you say, and try something newer. Or (would be my favourite - heck, I did it) dump the whole motherboard for something with an nForce2 chipset, with built-in Soundstorm/MIDI support on the motherboard (but if you are running PC133 memory, you'll need to upgrade to PC2100 or PC2700 DDR at the same time .. be sort of tempting to spend $100 on a faster CPU too .. yes?). That eliminated both the motherboard chipset and the SBLive problems in one swell foop. Gosh! If I was *really* into Hi Fi I'd be tempted to throw away the P4 system I built in December and do as you suggest just for the sheer pleasure of having all of that beautiful kit! Thanks for making my afternoon with a wonderful post... -- wrmst rgrds Robin Bignall Remote Hertfordshire England http://homepage.ntlworld.com/docrobin/homepage.htm |
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