Almighty1 said:
dxkim,
I have the Internal version of the Audgy Platinum. I never knew the Firewire had drivers from Creative since mines uses the ones built into WinXP
That's because the drivers are not entirely WinXP drivers. As it was explained to me...the Creative Firewire device is not entirely up to Firewire specifications especially the latest Oxford 911 spec. which most modern Firewire devices require (like Hard Drives).
It seems that the Creative Firewire device is a hybrid device that is part hardware and part software driven. Thus there is a little driver that is in the main Audigy software install. It is NOT an option that you can deselect on install as it would cause the whole device to malfunction. It shows up as a Firewire device in Windows, but it needs this little driver for Windows to recognise the the imbedded Firewire device as such.
But therein lies the problem. Creative is not known for their software drivers. It seems whenever there is a driver update, it seems to favor Creative devices mostly (big suprise). Sony Firewire devices also seem to work as well (esp DV cameras)...others are a bit of a crapshoot. Now, Creative could make it more compatable with other devices...but why bother when the Audigy 2, which has a true dedicated fully Oxford 911 compliant chip onboard that is comming out this month?! Creative is aware of the incompatability (for some time now), but Creative originally designed it for audio and DV...Oxford 911 compliant devices were not.
Another big problem is that if your Mobo has onboard Firewire or you want to add a dedicated PCI card to get around the compatablilty...you are screwed. It seems the the Creative drivers and the Windows drivers for a true Firewire device conflict and cause both to malfunction. Since you cannot disable the Creative Firewire device you have to disable the other Firewire device...and now you are back to where you started.
This driver conflict is a bit of a blame game...Creative blames Windows and Windows blames Creative. If this sounds familiar...this same exact scenario was happeneing 1 year ago between these two companies over the Sound Blaster Live and the Audigy's drivers. Nothing changes
Personally as much as I would like to blame this on Windows, its really Creative and their crappy drivers that is the problem.
Moral of the don't buy Creative.
BTW, don't bother buying an Audigy 2...a little known secret is that it's DCMA compliant. So even if you want play that mp3 or Windows media file, if its copy protected, it won't play

Since when is an Audio card supposed to do that?!
