There is a lot of information here -
http://www.pulseaudio.org/wiki/PerfectSetup
For Audacity they suggest:
'Audacity can use OSS for sound input and sound output. By changing the
2 settings in preferences to /dev/dsp, and running audacity as
padsp audacity . . .'
or they talk about using pasuspender
'Using pasuspender to momentarily suspend pulseaudio is another way to
use Audacity.
pasuspender -- audacity <argument> . . .'
And there is information about gnome setups etc. - I haven't tried any
of this though so I can't say if it helps - it didn't help when I tried
it with a problem with Audacity.
David
Andrea wrote:
Palo S. wrote:
I guess there is a way to switch it off but I don\'t
know how to do that. You can still remove it, test
Ekiga and then install it back, just to find out
whether it would solve the problem at all and then
try to find a way to witch pulseaudio off...
P.
There is a way, although not 100% satisfactory and it is described here
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-users/2008-December/169274.html
but in my case (unless I forgot something) it leaves the default alsa device to
point to a non
running pulseaudio, but selecting the hw device it is ok.
but yes, ekiga works better.... as we have always known :-)
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