, these applications must be executed mutely in
the thin-client architecture of Unix.
It is designed to work on multi-user
operating systems: several users can activate the network audio system by
executing their own audio applications in the same computer ( terminal server)
and their
Is anyone using NAS? I notice their mailing list no
longer works and there are jillions of debian msgs on
Google about it needing a maintainer.
I have just installed it from the tarball because
Sarge doesn't have the dev version and the tarball is
more recent. It seems to be a very complete system
On Sat, Aug 07, 1999 at 06:55:17AM +0100, John Gay wrote:
>
>
> I've set up an old 486DX33 as an X-Terminal and I plan to put a sound card
> into
> it. After a few questions and searching, it seems that nas, network audio
> system
> is what I need, but I can'
I've set up an old 486DX33 as an X-Terminal and I plan to put a sound card into
it. After a few questions and searching, it seems that nas, network audio system
is what I need, but I can't seem to find much information about it on the web.
Does anyone know if there is a home site f
> "Bill" == Bill Moran <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Bill> Fatal server error could not create audio connection block info
This means that when the NAS tried to start the audio server, it
died. Most likley, your kernel does not support sound, at least not in
the way that the NAS server expects
Hi
I have a Toshiba laptop with debian installed. When I boot
I receive the following message:
Starting the Network Audio System
Fatal server error
could not create audio connection block info
Does anyone know what this means and how it might affect the working
of the machine?
Thanks
Bill
Hi all,
Finaly I have managed to get XPilot running with sound, recompiling it
with the NCD-Sound-option and Network Audio System (NAS) V1.2 P4
(according to the auinfo readout), which is available as Debian-package.
Unfortunately NAS does not have a good sound quality, there are always
errors
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