- Feb 8, 2004
- 12,604
- 15
- 81
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16814999012
And I thought killer network cards were a waste of money :whiste:
And I thought killer network cards were a waste of money :whiste:
LOL!!! I should have thought of that. I wonder what the price was/is.
Stuff like this has been around for a long long time. Think soundblasters. I assume the way they work is simple - they provide a high frequency path to ground and hopeful they provide some transistor capacity to provide power during transient spikes in demand. Since motherboard audio is usually horrible, simple power supply buffering tricks like this can work so don't laugh it off.
Stuff like this has been around for a long long time. Think soundblasters. I assume the way they work is simple - they provide a high frequency path to ground and hopeful they provide some transistor capacity to provide power during transient spikes in demand. Since motherboard audio is usually horrible, simple power supply buffering tricks like this can work so don't laugh it off.
Stuff like this has been around for a long long time. Think soundblasters. I assume the way they work is simple - they provide a [/b]high frequency path to ground and hopeful they provide some transistor capacity to provide power during transient spikes in demand. Since motherboard audio is usually horrible, simple power supply buffering tricks like this can work so don't laugh it off.
Lol. It's just six caps soldered to a PCB.
So this is what I've been doing wrong. I've always sent the digital signal to the DAC, but I guess if it gets really loud 1's and 0's it must convert more accurately.If you care about the audio quality and you don't have it being sent digitally straight to the amp you are doing it wrong.
LOL this is hilarious.
Does it even do anything or is it literally just a bunch of random caps and stuff just to make people think it does?
Stuff like this has been around for a long long time. Think soundblasters. I assume the way they work is simple - they provide a high frequency path to ground and hopeful they provide some transistor capacity to provide power during transient spikes in demand. Since motherboard audio is usually horrible, simple power supply buffering tricks like this can work so don't laugh it off.
Yup!