@kaihengfeng
Can you describe what fix was implemented? I updated to kernel
5.4.0-52-generic in Ubuntu 20.04 and it is not fixed. I still must run
the script. Also, something has regressed with the latest updates
because now I have to manually run "pulseaudio --start" after booting to
get it al
@draamses
I am surprised to hear it doesn't work, at least manually, on the flex.
I obviously don't work for samsung and don't know the hardware internal
details, but there is nothing in the script that is known to be
explicitly model specific. I am also just running a standard ubuntu
kernel now
Just FYI for anyone interested, The daemon is now working again. Looks like
the last update of systemd caused the issue. Through another forum I found I
was able to fix it by just running "sudo apt reinstall systemd" (which also
fixed the broken battery indicator).
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@kaihengfeng
Yes, my model is included :
SND_PCI_QUIRK(0x144d, 0xc18a, "Samsung Galaxy Book Ion (NP930XCJ-
K01US)", ALC298_FIXUP_SAMSUNG_HEADPHONE_VERY_QUIET),
However, the quirk called "ALC298_FIXUP_SAMSUNG_HEADPHONE_VERY_QUIET" is
just the fix for the headphone jack only. So yes, that fix is
@draamses
I never encountered the metallic sound on my ion, so I am probably not
much help on that one. I do recall reading about it when I was
researching the speaker issue, so I do agree it is a separate issue. If
you google around a bit, it seems like there was a separate fix for
metallic sou
@draamses
I am glad to hear it works on the flex. Thanks for the kind words, but
Mike Pozulp deserves most of the credit. He seems to have disappeared
here, but he had the key process for how to do it. For what its worth,
I don't recognize snd_soc_skl_hda_dsp (of course I am not using
Manjaro).
A few thoughts... Just based on my work before and the few people I
helped later, in my experience Samsung reuses as much as possible in
similar models and I don't think the laptops are that much different (if
any) with regard to sound. So I don't think its option 1. Option 2 is
a possibility an
Yes, thank you for the brightness fix.
If it helps, I did remember the changes to make to the common.c file for
logging. In that bsd article you can ignore most of the text, but
somewhere in the middleish there is a hyper link that says something
like my hack. If you click on it, it shows you in
Hi Drew,
Since creating the TO912.sh script I have also upgraded to a GalaxyBook2
Pro (NP930XED) running 22.04 and the script was required (i.e. the
latest kernels don't automatically fix issue), but the script continues
to work fine for me on both headphones are speakers. Personally I would
reco
Thanks, I had tried a couple of things on the brightness, but it doesn't really
bother me that much and I kind of forgot about it. I will try your approach.
So full disclaimer, I am usually an Angular architect and not a linux
admin so try at your own risk, etc., etc., but here are my thoughts o
That is odd. If its an option, you might consider a fresh install of
22.04 and then just the few steps. Its possible something else was
changed or didn't reset fully as expected, but I know a full reload can
be a ton of work and disruption. I don't know which script version they
had in the blog,
Latest TO912.sh
** Attachment added: "TO912.sh"
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/1851518/+attachment/5630636/+files/TO912.sh
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