Originally posted by: biostud
run them in SLI
Originally posted by: jtusa4
Yes, I know, weird question. Just wondering if it's doable. My thinking would be to have one outputting to receiver for music and such while the other does just the normal sounds through regular PC speakers.
I don't think it's possible, but maybe it is?
Originally posted by: Dubb
Originally posted by: jtusa4
Yes, I know, weird question. Just wondering if it's doable. My thinking would be to have one outputting to receiver for music and such while the other does just the normal sounds through regular PC speakers.
I don't think it's possible, but maybe it is?
precisely what I do. Winamp + recording apps use the Hammerfall DSP
Windows + everything else uses the onboard
works very well
Originally posted by: biostud
run them in SLI
Originally posted by: AristoV300
Originally posted by: biostud
run them in SLI
:laugh:
Originally posted by: Dubb
Originally posted by: jtusa4
Yes, I know, weird question. Just wondering if it's doable. My thinking would be to have one outputting to receiver for music and such while the other does just the normal sounds through regular PC speakers.
I don't think it's possible, but maybe it is?
precisely what I do. Winamp + recording apps use the Hammerfall DSP
Windows + everything else uses the onboard
works very well
Originally posted by: AnnihilatorX
Originally posted by: biostud
run them in SLI
lol don't mislead the n00b here.
Originally posted by: Doctorweir
Originally posted by: AnnihilatorX
Originally posted by: biostud
run them in SLI
lol don't mislead the n00b here.
Yeah, he won't have the proper SLI-bridge cable anyway 😉
Originally posted by: tr1kstanc3
you only need 1 soundcard with variable output mapping. what connection type is your receiver? a cheap prosumer card like the m-audio delta series can assign different stereo outputs to different tasks. lets say stereo channel 1/2 (for left/right) can be used as your windows sound output where stereo channels 3/4 can be assigned to output in winamp. its pretty straightforward.
Originally posted by: jtusa4
Originally posted by: tr1kstanc3
you only need 1 soundcard with variable output mapping. what connection type is your receiver? a cheap prosumer card like the m-audio delta series can assign different stereo outputs to different tasks. lets say stereo channel 1/2 (for left/right) can be used as your windows sound output where stereo channels 3/4 can be assigned to output in winamp. its pretty straightforward.
That would be perfect. The receiver has pretty much every input, optical, coax, multichannel and just stereo/composite.