Hello all,

I've been doing some sound editing lately on my FC12, just to discover that there is a new annoyance in town, namely Pulseaudio.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PulseAudio


I discovered it when Audacity failed to play back files or made choppy noises. Other applications also seem to get messed up with this piece of I-don't-know-what.


My first instinct is to kick it out of my system, but since Fedora is a system for experts (are they going to open a Red Hat University soon?) I don't really know how to do that and what consequences I may face. I mean, it's not so easy to just shut down. Killing the server makes it restart (as a matter of fact, killall -9 pulseaudio has become my catch-all solution for audio problems lately). And I haven't even figured out how to disable this restart mechanism.


And unfortunately, with all those fancy graphs and fluffy talk about generalized everything, I haven't gotten to grasp how the machinery ticks. Are there any special files? Domain sockets? What?


Does anyone have insights about this? Is there any reason why this audio server could be really useful, except for all the fine words said about it? Weren't things OK as they were in the good old times, when audio was just /dev/dsp?


But most important of all: Should I give this thing a mighty kick in the bottom? And if so, how?


Thanks,

  Eli

--
Web: http://www.billauer.co.il

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