Karsten wrote (on 22/4):
Try moving your soundcard to a slot further from your PS/2 port. I've
heard of instances of crosstalk before, suspect this might be a case of
same.
I moved my NIC a slot (it shared an IRQ with the mouse) and that ended the
noise produced by my speakers when I moved the
>> >> Me thinks they are on the same hardware interupt. Ut O.
>
>> >Try a USB mouse, maybe?
>
>> I can't really spare money for a new mouse currently :( I noticed my
>> soundcard and my eth0 both use IRQ 5, but otherwise I could detect no
>> double uses.
>
>Swap with somebody, if possible. At
on Mon, Apr 22, 2002, hanasaki ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> Karsten M. Self wrote:
> >on Mon, Apr 22, 2002, I.J.W. Wever ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
> >wrote:
> >>Also I noticed that, as under Windows, I can now hear my mouse move:
> >>a simple staccato sound; almost like every pixel it moves gives a
> >
Me thinks they are on the same hardware interupt. Ut O.
Karsten M. Self wrote:
on Mon, Apr 22, 2002, I.J.W. Wever ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Hello,
After being pointed to the existance of the via82xxx module, I
recompiled my kernel with that module and hoped to be able
to play some music. Un
on Mon, Apr 22, 2002, I.J.W. Wever ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> Hello,
>
> After being pointed to the existance of the via82xxx module, I
> recompiled my kernel with that module and hoped to be able
> to play some music. Unfortunately, it doesn't. I've tried three different
> music players (ALSA,
Hello,
After being pointed to the existance of the via82xxx module, I
recompiled my kernel with that module and hoped to be able
to play some music. Unfortunately, it doesn't. I've tried three different
music players (ALSA, FreeAmp, ...), so the problem isn't in the player.
In my syslog, the line
6 matches
Mail list logo