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SturgiesYrFase
Maybe like 10+ years ago
I've been, don't believe the hype. Horse sashimi was delicious though.
It's an older Creative card, still has plenty of oomph. It had a breakout box. Lord knows where it is.
As a hobbyist musician, the more you externalise these sorts of things, the more latency you create. A discreet, internal, soundcard is probably going to trump external DACs for a long time to come.
External DACs totally have their place, music playback, movies/shows. But for doing audio work, internal is the way to go.
It's really good to see. When I first got started I was lucky enough to live with someone well versed in the ins and outs of linux setup and troubleshooting. I couldn't imagine getting started, running into a roadblock that I couldn't surmount (there's been a few times searching forums ended up with one exact match to my issue, and the only response to the person's question was OP just saying "figured it out" and closing the issue) and having everyone I ask just tell me to figure it out myself....
That's a good segue! One place here that I've noticed has way less toxicity than reddit is the Linux communities. I found the reddit Linux subs had a load of gatekeeping, people tended more towards going: if you can't figure out how to use a search engine you probably shouldn't be using Linux.
And then complaining that the general public doesn't want to use Linux.
Here on lemmy I see a lot more people hopping in a thread to say things like: here's the solution to your beginners issue, and here's how to look it up. If you have more issues just shoot me a reply and I'll gladly give you any help I can.
It's really refreshing to be honest.
Otherwise I very much agree there's a lot of doom posting everywhere else.
Right in the feels dude....
Touché!
Actual sound also contains a larger frequency spectrum than our ears are designed to handle. Not throwing shade, our audio file formats also contain a narrower frequency spectrum than we can hear generally speaking.
Is it going to be a lower percentage of the total population though? There's a lot about ye olde days that kinda gets generalised, and hand-waved. Like people's ability to read in medieval times. Sure it wasn't as prevalent as today, but reading was probably a lot more common than most people think.
As for belief in mythical beings, who knows, religious belief was a lot stronger in the 1700s, but that doesn't necessarily mean everyone believed in the fae.
Is he illiterate? Because from your one sentence, I'd say that tracks.