Frank Hileman wrote:
Well I looked around and supposedly that protected content disabling is not supposed to happen for audio, only video, can anyone confirm?
No, protected audio content is definitely protected. You can't play DRM-protected content over S/PDIF* because that would give you a zero-degradation copy that you can do whatever you like with; you
can play it over HDMI because the HDMI spec addresses DRM protection.** You can also play it over any analog output you like.**
* You can play any non-DRM-protected content over SPDIF, of course; this includes DVDs.
** ... so long as all the drivers that touch the audio are correctly DRM-signed.
All the audio drivers that come with Vista are DRM-signed; all the audio drivers that come with a system that has a Vista logo are DRM-signed; all the audio drivers that come with a device that has a Vista logo are DRM-signed; all the audio drivers that are distributed through Windows Update are DRM-signed. (If any of these are not DRM-signed, that's a bug, and one with an easy fix... release another update, correctly signed this time.)
Frank Hileman wrote:
Interesting thing is, companies producing professional audio cards for musicians don't seem to have Vista drivers. So I guess the driver change was massive, or it is not considered a good platform for that task. I would like to know the reason.
That's interesting. Can you give specifics? Perhaps the XP driver "just works", or perhaps the Microsoft UAA class drivers serve their needs?