Thierry Chatelet wrote:
> On Friday 16 January 2009 01:58:03 H.S. wrote:
>> Thierry Chatelet wrote:
>>> You have to blacklist usb sound module. I dont remember how to do that,
>>> but googling it should give you the answer. If you dont know how to do
>>> it, xjust say it and I will look for what I
On Friday 16 January 2009 01:58:03 H.S. wrote:
> Thierry Chatelet wrote:
> > You have to blacklist usb sound module. I dont remember how to do that,
> > but googling it should give you the answer. If you dont know how to do
> > it, xjust say it and I will look for what I have done age ago!!!
>
> I
Thierry Chatelet wrote:
>
> You have to blacklist usb sound module. I dont remember how to do that, but
> googling it should give you the answer. If you dont know how to do it, xjust
> say it and I will look for what I have done age ago!!!
>
>
I will try to find that out, it should not be a
> it better than others, but I've had to deal with it since Fedora core 1 in
> 2003.
>
> All the best, and I hope the suggestion fixes your problem.
I should also mention that I am using pulseaudio. Other than this
problem of sound mixer applet getting mixed up about card and no see
USB port of the computer
> (Microsoft LX-3000 in this case, though I don't think it matters) and
> reboot the computer with the headset still plugged in, Debian fails to
> detect my audio card. I have the sound mixer applet in the panel to
> control the volume and stuff. But that applet d
USB port of the computer
> (Microsoft LX-3000 in this case, though I don't think it matters) and
> reboot the computer with the headset still plugged in, Debian fails to
> detect my audio card. I have the sound mixer applet in the panel to
> control the volume and stuff. But that applet d
tters) and
reboot the computer with the headset still plugged in, Debian fails to
detect my audio card. I have the sound mixer applet in the panel to
control the volume and stuff. But that applet does not see any audio
device at all. It keeps showing "Select Mixer", but upon clicking on
Since my power has come back on after hurricane Isabel, none of my
programs will play sound until I fidget with the volume controls. This
is strange because until this week I never had to do so. I'm using
unstable, with an es1371 sound card, and using aumix to load the mixer
settings at start
On Sat, 2002-04-20 at 17:35, stan wrote:
> One 2 of my woody machines, right clicking on the Gnome sound mixer applet,
> and selecting "Run Mixer" does not bring up the mixer. On a 3rd it does.
>
> Any sugestios as to what I may have wrong?
sounds like you are probably m
One 2 of my woody machines, right clicking on the Gnome sound mixer applet,
and selecting "Run Mixer" does not bring up the mixer. On a 3rd it does.
Any sugestios as to what I may have wrong?
--
"They that would give up essential liberty for temporary safety deserve
neither lib
On Tue, 3 Nov 1998, Brent McMillan wrote:
> xmix can only adjust DSP and mic levels, I can play cds and midis, but the
> only levels I can adjust is DSP and Mic. I would love to be able to
> adjust bass and treble or the line-in. The only kernal option about a
> mixer in xconfig is "ACI mixer".
I've been battling sound on Linux for about a while and I think
it's time to get some second opinions.
xmix can only adjust DSP and mic levels, I can play cds and midis, but the
only levels I can adjust is DSP and Mic. I would love to be able to
adjust bass and treble or the line-in. The
Xiaonan Ma wrote:
> Is there a program that allows multiple applications to play audio
> at the same time? Like a mixer daemon ... If so, could someone point
> it to me?
>
> Thanks.
>
> xiaonan
>
Check out alsa's sound driver. I think i have read somthing about it here...
http://alsa.jcu.cz/
Is there a program that allows multiple applications to play audio
at the same time? Like a mixer daemon ... If so, could someone point
it to me?
Thanks.
xiaonan
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