On 02/18/2012 04:09 PM, Florian Kulzer wrote:
On Sat, Feb 18, 2012 at 12:39:53 -0500, brian wrote:
On 02/17/2012 05:11 PM, brian wrote:
On 02/17/2012 02:40 PM, Richard Owlett wrote:
[...]
http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=658128
I cannot follow further as I'm on dialup and do not have debian
installed
HTH
The solution linked to above worked as regards reducing the speed of
the video playback back to normal i.e. blacklisting snd_hda_intel in
/etc/modprobe.d/alsa-base-blacklist.conf
Unfortunately the sound no longer works, but that may well be
another problem.
Do you have another soundcard in addition to the intel onboard one? If
not then it is not too surprising that sound stops working as soon as
you unload the driver of the intel card.
The bug report cited above suggests that the HDMI alsa sink is the root
of the problem.
I have some spare sound cards, but I suspect that (given the size of
the case) my wife's PC is going to be one of those annoying ones with
no spare slots.
Are you actually using the HDMI output for sound?
No.
If you
are connecting external loudspeakers or headphones to the analog output
(standard 3.5 mm plugs), or if you are using the internal speakers of a
laptop, then you might get flash and sound working together by disabling
the HDMI slot when you load the snd_hda_intel module. If you need help
with this then please show me the output of
cat /proc/asound/cards
(when the snd_hda_intel module is loaded)
cat /proc/asound/cards
0 [SB ]: HDA-Intel - HDA ATI SB
HDA ATI SB at 0xfe7f4000 irq 16
1 [HDMI ]: HDA-Intel - HDA ATI HDMI
HDA ATI HDMI at 0xfe9e8000 irq 19
2 [CODEC ]: USB-Audio - USB Audio CODEC
Burr-Brown from TI USB Audio CODEC at usb-0000:00:12.1-1,
full speed
--
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/4f402d44.4050...@meadows.pair.com