Laurent E wrote:
- According to the command cat /proc/asound/card0/codec#0, the chip
is a SigmaTel ID 7645. [...]
1/ Is it possible that the chip is incorrectly detected?
Your driver doesn't know about your chip.
Support for this chip was added in May:
Halim Sahin wrote:
Hi,
I think pulseaudio is your problem.
Remove it and switch to alsa output.
HTH.
halim
That's a little extreme. I haven't tried skype with the Fedora 10
pulseaudio (which is supposed to be a lot better) but I generally tell
skype to use a plughw device rather
I'm trying to get bit perfect output out of my linux box, but I can't find much
info on the web. I'm using ALSA.
Some questions:
- does Linux/ALSA features dynamic sample rates?
- is it possible to set the bit-depth? (in my case to 24 bit)
- what other variables do i have to consider in order
Sorry, I didn't realize that my reply didn't go directly to the alsa-user
list.
I would run down to Circuit City, but alas! Shanghai doesn't have one. :)
There is a Best Buy here though. Ha! Pretty nice actually, reminds me of
home a little. It is funny, how they have Walmart and Best Buy and a
I am a newbie, and I am not even sure this is the right place to write... In
case, excuse me, and please just tell me whom I should ask.
I am trying to
make the modem work under linux (ubuntu 8.10). Scanmodem indicated that I had
to install a hsfmodem driver, but doing that the pc (Sony Vaio
Takashi Iwai wrote:
Hi,
per popular demand, I wrote a brief document more about HD-audio driver.
It's now found in sound git tree as Documentation/sound/alsa/HD-Audio.txt.
The git tree is:
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tiwai/sound-2.6.git
You can get the text from web:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am a newbie, and I am not even sure this is the right place to write... In
case, excuse me, and please just tell me whom I should ask.
I am trying to
make the modem work under linux (ubuntu 8.10). Scanmodem indicated that I had
to install a hsfmodem driver, but
On Di, Dez 09, 2008 at 10:45:43 +0800, Matthew Patenaude wrote:
Does anyone have any idea what is going on, and how to check for the
problem.
When I first bought this machine (over a year and a half ago now) I had no
sound at all and learned a lot about alsa and sound cards, but I have had
I'll answer what I can.
1. Not sure of your question.. here so I'll leave this along
2. This is hardware dependant.. many/most onboard digital outputs are fixed at 16 bit 48 khz devices like the M-Audio delta series are flexible and can be set via software application (i.e.
Thanks, I saw that post and downloaded the text. I'll look it over.
Matthew
On Thu, Dec 11, 2008 at 9:25 AM, stan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Di, Dez 09, 2008 at 10:45:43 +0800, Matthew Patenaude wrote:
Does anyone have any idea what is going on, and how to check for the
problem.
On Wed, 10 Dec 2008, stan wrote:
Paulo Moura Guedes wrote:
I'm trying to get bit perfect output out of my linux box, but I can't
What is bit perfect output? Sound output is an analog process ( sound waves
in the air are analog). You do know that you can just copy the sound file
whereever you
At Wed, 10 Dec 2008 14:45:52 -0700,
stan wrote:
Takashi Iwai wrote:
Hi,
per popular demand, I wrote a brief document more about HD-audio driver.
It's now found in sound git tree as Documentation/sound/alsa/HD-Audio.txt.
The git tree is:
Paulo Moura Guedes wrote:
- does Linux/ALSA features dynamic sample rates?
The default device (named default) uses automatic resampling, but the
spdif device does not.
- is it possible to set the bit-depth? (in my case to 24 bit)
Yes, if the hardware supports it.
- what other variables do i
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