On 14/07/10 10:42 AM, H.S. wrote: > On 14/07/10 10:22 AM, H.S. wrote: >> If I go to Settings->System Settings->Multimedia and do a "Test" on the >> various devices, the motherboard's audio does produce any sound, but I >> can hear the audio if I do it on my headphones. > > Sorry, forgot the "not" there. It should be ".. the motherboard's audio > does not produce any sound, but I can ... " >
I checked the syslog file and noticed some messages from pulseaudio (things like "ratelimit.c: 10 events suppressed ") which are not unusual AFAIK. I then booted into Fedora 13 which is also amd64 and in which the sound was working. It wasn't working anymore there either. I then booted in to Windows 7; sound was working there. I was checking for sings of the problem in Fedora and Debian when I noticed that the clocks were not synced to a time server in both. Time in Fedora was off which I fixed by making it check an ntp time server. Time in Debian correct, but it was not checking any time server. I made to do that as well. And right after this change I rebooted and now the sound is working. So, was it just the clock? Meanwhile, Ekiga doesn't see any sound devices now. In its Audio section of Preferences, sound devices are all grayed out and it doesn't detect any when I click on "detect". -- Please reply to this list only. I read this list on its corresponding newsgroup on gmane.org. Replies sent to my email address are just filtered to a folder in my mailbox and get periodically deleted without ever having been read. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/i1knmr$av...@dough.gmane.org