=?UTF-8?Q?Joel_Wir=C4=81mu_Pauling?= writes:
> Rather than going with a Consumer card. Head to a Audio/Music store. What
> you are looking for is a USB - Audio interface; they generally have much
> better Signal to Noise ration, hardware mixers and Ballanced XLR outputs
> and Inputs. Something lik
On Tuesday, May 24, 2016 at 2:20:04 PM UTC-5, Sven Joachim wrote:
> Only until a kernel graphics driver is loaded, those by default use the
> resolution which is preferred by the monitor for the console.
Sven,
Thank you for your response.
hwinfo report the Intel graphic driver i915 is active.
I said Fiio E1 I Meant - Q1 :
http://www.head-fi.org/t/780726/fiios-new-q1-portable-dac-amp-lets-drink-to-happy-listening
On 24 May 2016 at 18:22, Joel Wirāmu Pauling wrote:
> Rather than going with a Consumer card. Head to a Audio/Music store. What
> you are looking for is a USB - Audio interfa
Rather than going with a Consumer card. Head to a Audio/Music store. What
you are looking for is a USB - Audio interface; they generally have much
better Signal to Noise ration, hardware mixers and Ballanced XLR outputs
and Inputs. Something like the focusrite scarlet.
Alternatively if you are jus
deloptes writes:
> I suggest you check here
> http://www.alsa-project.org/main/index.php/Matrix:Main
> and try the alsa mailing list.
I did try that link and I see that, as I suspected, there
are tons of USB sound cards. My thanks also to Jude DaShiell and kon
Alstadheimkfor
replies. I h
Den 24. mai 2016 20:27, skrev Martin McCormick:
- (see subject)
I have had good luck going to a musical-instruments store, rather than a
computer store. They know sound. Explain your intended use to them, and
they might actually understand what you want. Get a no-frills, but not
the very cheapest u
Thinkpenguin.com sells a usb sound card crystal-cs if memory serves that
needs no proprietary drivers.
On Tue, 24 May 2016, Martin McCormick wrote:
Date: Tue, 24 May 2016 14:27:38
From: Martin McCormick
To: Debian Users
Subject: What Mid-range USB Sound Cards Work with Linux?
Resent-Date: Tu
Joe writes:
> For recording, good signal to noise ratio is important, and the four or
> five internal cards I've used over the years have all been very poor in
> this respect, maybe in the low 40s in dB.
>
> USB devices I've tried have had much less noise, particularly if the
> audio ground side
On 5/24/2016 6:11 AM, Markos wrote:
Hi,
I just found the WebRTC (https://webrtc.org/) project but I still
don't understand if I already can use it as an alternative to Skype.
How do I use it with Firefox in Debian Jessie?
Any tip?
Thanks,
Markos
http://www.techradar.com/us/how-to/compu
deloptes writes:
> I suggest you check here
> http://www.alsa-project.org/main/index.php/Matrix:Main
> and try the alsa mailing list.
>
> I would stay to the PCI cards if possible because with USB you will have
> lesser speed and quality, but it is up to you.
> Consider CPU and hard drive speed a
On Mon, May 23, 2016 at 03:20:32PM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> On Tue 24 May 2016 at 01:13:34 (+1200), cbannis...@slingshot.co.nz wrote:
> > On Sun, May 22, 2016 at 11:11:27AM +0100, Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > >
> > > But I am only using us-ascii, iso-8859-1,
> > > utf-8
> > > (locale) and utf-8,
On Tue, 24 May 2016 20:44:59 +0200
deloptes wrote:
>
> I would stay to the PCI cards if possible because with USB you will
> have lesser speed and quality, but it is up to you.
> Consider CPU and hard drive speed as well.
>
For recording, good signal to noise ratio is important, and the four
On 2016-05-24 10:54 -0700, ray wrote:
> I would like to control the graphic resolution on a minimally
> installed stretch to help make the console easier to read.
>
> This is a Toshiba 4K display on a laptop. Stretch is a EFI boot on a 400 GB
> SSD.
Nice machine.
> This is what I tried and f
Martin McCormick wrote:
> I went to a local electronics emporium and asked for a
> USB sound card that might possibly work under Linux. I have been
> messing with Linux and USB long enough to know that a number of
> USB sound cards mostly work well enough for one to play and
> record stereo but so
On 2016-05-24 09:34 +0200, Erwan David wrote:
> I have an email server in Jessie, and I see that clamav is stuck at
> version 0.99 thus getting many warnings that it is outdated. 0.99.2 is
> in testing, but to install it aptitude wants to remove dbus, and I
> think it would be a bad idea...
>
> Is
I went to a local electronics emporium and asked for a
USB sound card that might possibly work under Linux. I have been
messing with Linux and USB long enough to know that a number of
USB sound cards mostly work well enough for one to play and
record stereo but some special features may not
I would like to control the graphic resolution on a minimally installed stretch
to help make the console easier to read.
This is a Toshiba 4K display on a laptop. Stretch is a EFI boot on a 400 GB
SSD.
This is what I tried and found to work partially:
GRUB_GFXMODE=1920x1440
GRUB_GFXPAYLOAD_
On May 24, 2016 12:45 PM, "Seeker" wrote:
>
>
>
> On 5/23/2016 12:50 PM, Nicolas George wrote:
>>
>> Le quintidi 5 prairial, an CCXXIV, Lisi Reisz a écrit :
American? There are two continents. Do you mean the U.S.A? - the land
of
the rooster and other euphemistic terms?
>>>
>>> What
On 5/23/2016 12:50 PM, Nicolas George wrote:
Le quintidi 5 prairial, an CCXXIV, Lisi Reisz a écrit :
American? There are two continents. Do you mean the U.S.A? - the land of
the rooster and other euphemistic terms?
What becomes of Canada and Mexico in that scenario??
A friend of mine suggest
Markos writes:
> I just found the WebRTC (https://webrtc.org/) project but I still don't
> understand if I already can use it as an alternative to Skype.
You need a web phone and a (SIP) server. For a demo phone, see
e.g. https://tryit.jssip.net.
-- Juha
Hi,
I just found the WebRTC (https://webrtc.org/) project but I still don't
understand if I already can use it as an alternative to Skype.
How do I use it with Firefox in Debian Jessie?
Any tip?
Thanks,
Markos
On 05/24/2016 04:09 PM, dummy user wrote:
> it seems that boot script which runs 'mount' doesn't recognize fuse as
> remote file system.
Yes, because fuse can also be used for some local file systems, so
systemd can't know based on the type that this is indeed a remote
file system.
> Could you
Hello *,
it seems that boot script which runs 'mount' doesn't recognize fuse as remote
file system.
system: Debian 8.4
mycomp:/etc/fstab:
#
/dev/sda1 / ext4errors=remount-ro 0 1
...
curlftpfs#foo.org:///data/klmn /var/local/klmn fuse
no_verify_peer
On Tue, May 24, 2016 at 09:41:08AM CEST, "Arnaud Jacques / SecuriteInfo.com"
said:
> Hello,
>
>
>
> > Is there a way to get 0.99.2 in Jessie (jessie-updates and jessie
>
> > backports do not have it either).
>
>
>
> More information at :
>
>
>
> https://qa.debian.org/developer.php?lo
On 05/24/2016 09:41 AM, Arnaud Jacques / SecuriteInfo.com wrote:
> Hello,
>
>> Is there a way to get 0.99.2 in Jessie (jessie-updates and jessie
>> backports do not have it either).
>
> More information at :
>
> https://qa.debian.org/developer.php?login=pkg-clamav-devel%40lists.alioth.debian.org
Hello,
> Is there a way to get 0.99.2 in Jessie (jessie-updates and jessie
> backports do not have it either).
More information at :
https://qa.debian.org/developer.php?login=pkg-clamav-devel%40lists.alioth.debian.org
Link to "Excuse" : https://qa.debian.org/excuses.php?package=clamav
"Too you
Hello,
I have an email server in Jessie, and I see that clamav is stuck at
version 0.99 thus getting many warnings that it is outdated. 0.99.2 is
in testing, but to install it aptitude wants to remove dbus, and I
think it would be a bad idea...
Is there a way to get 0.99.2 in Jessie (jess
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