Originally posted by Osmodivs
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Under Ubuntu and Fedora, the card works fine. Under openSUSE, it seems to not work at all for anything that accesses the card via straight ALSA under KDE, regardless of disabling PulseAudio. Not sure on the reasoning for this, and I ddin't really bother trying to compare stuff between that distro and another, so it might be possible to make it work "properly" under openSUSE, and it could also be possible it works fine since I've last tried it (I tried it I think back on 13.1).
If you use the back headphone/speaker jacks, you'll have to set the right setting from alsamixer after a clean distro install or else it won't work (I think it's set to use front panel by default). I don't think you can set individual power levels for the rear jacks like you can in Windows, at least from alsamixer, but the Headphones setting does operate at a higher level than Multichannel. I haven't tried anything higher than Stereo channel-wise under Linux nor Windows, so I have no idea how 5.1 audio would work.
Overall, it works fine most of the time (I'd say much better under Linux than Windows). For under $30, it's a nice card. If where ever you buy it from has it higher than that though, I'd suggest looking for another card. I eventually switched to my motherboard's onboard Realtek ALC882 chip and haven't noticed any sound quality difference, but on the other hand, I don't have to worry about any issues.
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