Half the people who are having sound problems are removing pulseaudio un-necessarily. As discovered several times already, the mixer setting is at zero. (I had the same problem too)
On Mon, Jul 27, 2009 at 9:13 PM, Ted Roche <[email protected]> wrote: > Everyone's piling on with problem reports; thought I'd add my experience. > > I did an upgrade-in-place, running preupgrade, from an up-to-date > Fedora 10. Most of the install went smoothly, but sound was not > working once I restarted. I tried the old saw of "yum erase > pulseaudio" that did NOT fix the problem. I relented an reinstalled > pulseaudio. Poking around pulseaudio monitor, I could see that audio > was being produced, just not making out the speakers. A morning of > Googling and poking around finally yielded this page: > > http://fedorasolved.org/Members/fenris02/pulseaudio-fixes-and-workarounds > > My solution was in step #4: installing gst-mixer and finding the PCM > setting at zero. Pushed it to 100% and sound works. > > Someone who understands how all the parts interact could do the Fedora > Community a great service by writing up a troubleshooting guide. > > -- > Ted Roche > Ted Roche & Associates, LLC > http://www.tedroche.com > > -- > fedora-list mailing list > [email protected] > To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list > Guidelines: > http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines >
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