Most PCI cards tend to be ~50% more expensive than PnP ISA ones. So there
are big economic reasons to go ISA, even though it is antiquated.
Linux has never really supported PnP, and now I hear people trying to
avoid _any_ support entirely. Gah.
I thought the point of Linux was to try to support as much hardware as
possible, even broken ones (eg Intel EtherExpress).
A good percentage of multimedia cards are PnP. In fact most recent
soundchips (CS423x, ESS18xx) are PnP. Motherboards come with PnP
soundchips embedded. And Linux doesnt really support any of them :-/
Is it any wonder why multimedia support on Linux still lags...
-Dan
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