Firewave
Encyclopedia
The FireWave is a device that is, essentially, an external FireWire soundcard made by Griffin Technology
Griffin Technology
Griffin Technology is a privately held U.S. company founded in Nashville, Tennessee in 1992 by Paul Griffin. The company designs and manufactures computer peripherals, consumer electronics, and accessories, the first products being primarily video adapters, in particular those to enable the...

 as a third party accessory for Apple Inc.'s line of personal computers.

FireWave uses the FireWire (IEEE 1394) port of the Mac as an audio output to its Dolby Digital sound processing hardware, effectively acting as an external soundcard.

Griffin Technology's product website explains that FireWave uses the Dolby processors to allow the user to connect a 5.1 surround sound system. Speakers are then connected directly to FireWave's speaker terminals. Many different sound setups and configurations are possible, using a combination of Griffin's included FireWave software and Apple's "Audio MIDI Setup" utility.

Griffin Technology's website lists the Griffin FireWave as a discontinued item.

Technical

FireWave has six output channels through three 1/8” (3.5mm) stereo mini-jacks: Left/Right, Center/Subwoofer and Right Surround/Left Surround. There is also a passthrough FireWire port to allow for chaining more FireWire devices.

FireWave supports Dolby Digital and Dolby Pro Logic II, and has a frequency response of 20-20,000 Hz.

Compatibility:
The FireWave is listed as being compatible with Mac OS X version 10.4.6 (Tiger.) Officially, Griffin Technology does not support the FireWave under OS X 10.5.x (Leopard), however version 1.0 of the FireWave software does work with Leopard. As with other devices, if there are problems after upgrading to 10.5 it is recommended that you repair your disk permissions.

Griffin has announced the discontinuation of this product, so it is unlikely that Leopard-specific drivers will be released.

External links

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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