Nicolas George <geo...@nsup.org> writes: > Le septidi 27 messidor, an CCXXIII, Martin G. McCormick a écrit : >> The only reason I put pulseaudio on here was way back >> when I was running lenny and had no /dev/dsp. Someone suggested >> installing pulseaudio. I did. /dev/dsp came back and life >> marched on. > > This was a bad suggestion. > > /dev/dsp is obsolete on Linux, has been for years. Not having is perfectly > normal, having it back is possibly a sign that you are on the path of > breaking things. > > In my opinion, PulseAudio is only good for messing things up. The features > it brings are of doubtful usefulness for most users
As you said, that's your opinion. I like being able to easily switch my sound from speakers to a USB or Bluetooth device, for example. > and the brittleness I haven't seen Pulse-only issues in two years or so. Really, most of the problems have been worked out. Only if you have a corner case (like a rare device with a badly-maintained ALSA driver) will you have problems. Then again, using a badly maintained driver is a recipe for disaster anyway, that's not Pulse-specific. > and complexity it introduces are very real. Use cases have gotten more complex. For the simplest-most use case (one user, static I/O config), Pulse is indeed overkill, and can be removed. I'd argue that the complexity it brings when installed is not *unneeded* complexity though. -- "We will need a longer wall when the revolution comes." --- AJS, quoting an uncertain source. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/86615kpf77....@gaheris.avalon.lan