To be fair, Chime...deaf isn't binary, no sound or all sounds. It's a range 
just like blindness however so I get why the question about audio, but it's not 
really my place to go how deaf are you. That's insensitive, just as asking 
anyone on here how blind are you.

Aftr all, I know the popular idea is oh, I'm blind, or oh I'm deaf, but there's 
a whole range within that category though.

For audio, you have choices...

Pulseaudio, which is, as far as I understand it, the legacy and one that's been 
around for ages and ages, and Pipewire, the replacement. I've had a lot of 
issues with Pipewire and virtual machines, and I'd argue Pipewire's still too 
raw for the majority of Linux folks to use unless they are the super leet hax0r 
types that feel okay doing a ton of stuff that's way, way above power user 
levels.*

Plus, Pulseaudio, in my experience at least using a fairly standard USB headset 
and earbuds in a 3.5mm jack...ust works out of the box on distros.

* It may have changed and become more stable. I'm not sure. I defaulted to 
Pulse on my Arch box because I didn't want to go in and test out if Pipewire 
works with my hardware setup...whereas Pulse just worked right away with no 
fuss bar me accidentally messing up device selection one time

On Wed, Apr 13, 2022 at 05:03:59PM -0700, Linux for blind general discussion 
wrote:
> Well, for an individual who is Deaf/Blind? You were asking about audio? I
> would think you would only require Braille support?
> Chime
> 
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