I can just confirm this - I tried it, but I don't ever want to do that to my opponent again. It's barley possible to have a conversion, because it's low on both sides and the person on the other side of the line will have some ugly noise. I also played a bit with the alsamixer-settings, but I couldn't get a good result.
On Wed, Apr 16, 2008 at 8:43 AM, Holger Freyther <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hey, > > I wondered what area of responsibility the ALSA state files are in, and > what > we plan to do with them. > > From my testing and experience: > gsmhandset.state: > - Works for doing phone calls > - People will not enjoy the conversation with you (at least > mickeyl didn't.) > - e.g. reducing "Mono" (as in alsamixer), reduces the ugly > noise on the > other side, but also reduces the volume. > > gsmheadset.state: > - Barely working. It is almost impossible to hear anything, > the microphone > does not seem to work at all. > > gsmspeakerout.state: > - The pains of audio. I will make this the sound of my > alarm clock, it has > the potential to wake up the death. :) > > > > so does this experience match up with yours? Is there anything I can > do/test > to improve the situation? On the bright side, the Qtopia/X11 image does > boot > up, you can enter your SIM PIN and make phone calls. We have to make the > audio experience as pleasant as possible now... :) > > > kind regards > z. > >