On Wed, Jul 15, 2015 at 7:01 PM, Martin G. McCormick
wrote:
> Javier Barroso writes:
>> There is a page on the wiki [1] where give you details about cs4236
>> devices on Debian (and why they were excluded from Distribution. I'm
>> not sure if cs4236B is included. I hope it work too,
>
> I
Javier Barroso writes:
> There is a page on the wiki [1] where give you details about cs4236
> devices on Debian (and why they were excluded from Distribution. I'm
> not sure if cs4236B is included. I hope it work too,
I looked there and didn't see any documentation stating
that the 423X s
Dan Ritter writes:
> A cheap USB audio device is probably a good bet. For example,
>
> http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16812186035&cm_re=usb_audio-_-12-186-035-_-Product
>
> is an $8 USB device that I can verify works with Debian and Mac
> OS X.
That is a very good suggestion
Hello, keeping you on cc, sorry if you don't want,
On Tue, Jul 14, 2015 at 5:49 PM, Martin G. McCormick
wrote:
> The system in question is a Dell Dimension 600-MHZ
> Pentium from way back in 2000. The BIOS date is October 10 of
> 1999. The sound chip set is a CS4236 on the mother board an
On Tue, Jul 14, 2015 at 10:49:25AM -0500, Martin G. McCormick wrote:
> This old Dell is not ready for the recycling center as
> it has a gigabyte of RAM and can still do lots of useful work so
> I hope there is a way to get audio working again.
A cheap USB audio device is probably a good bet
The system in question is a Dell Dimension 600-MHZ
Pentium from way back in 2000. The BIOS date is October 10 of
1999. The sound chip set is a CS4236 on the mother board and
it's always been touchy about working. You can count on the
sound dying after any significant upgrade but once you ge
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