Soundcard Help

Dremth Dremth at comcast.net
Sat Dec 11 13:02:59 UTC 2004


00:00.0 Host bridge: Intel Corp. 440BX/ZX/DX - 82443BX/ZX/DX Host bridge 
(rev 03)
00:01.0 PCI bridge: Intel Corp. 440BX/ZX/DX - 82443BX/ZX/DX AGP bridge 
(rev 03)
00:03.0 CardBus bridge: Texas Instruments PCI1225 (rev 01)
00:03.1 CardBus bridge: Texas Instruments PCI1225 (rev 01)
00:07.0 Bridge: Intel Corp. 82371AB/EB/MB PIIX4 ISA (rev 02)
00:07.1 IDE interface: Intel Corp. 82371AB/EB/MB PIIX4 IDE (rev 01)
00:07.2 USB Controller: Intel Corp. 82371AB/EB/MB PIIX4 USB (rev 01)
00:07.3 Bridge: Intel Corp. 82371AB/EB/MB PIIX4 ACPI (rev 02)
00:0d.0 Ethernet controller: 3Com Corporation 3c905C-TX/TX-M [Tornado] 
(rev 6c)
01:00.0 VGA compatible controller: Neomagic Corporation [MagicMedia 
256AV] (rev
12)
01:00.1 Multimedia audio controller: Neomagic Corporation [MagicMedia 
256AV Audio] (rev 12)



Ed Greshko wrote:

>
>
> Dremth wrote:
>
>> bash: lspci: command not found
>
>
> /sbin/lspci
>
>>
>>
>> Ed Greshko wrote:
>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Dremth wrote:
>>>
>>>> I already told you it worked in windows.
>>>>
>>>> "It worked on Windows but on Red Hat 9 it doesn't work at all and 
>>>> never did on Linux"
>>>>
>>>> I don't remember what soundcard I have exactly... I think it's 
>>>> Neomagic but I don't know the model number. Is there a way I can 
>>>> figure that out?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> You will have to determine what kind of card you have.
>>>
>>> Try "lspci" and see what it outputs.
>>>
>>> You could also consider opening your system, pulling out the 
>>> soundcard and seeing if something is written on the board.  :-)
>>>
>>> Ed
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>





More information about the redhat-list mailing list