Denis Shulyaka wrote:
> 2014/1/13 Clemens Ladisch
>> there should be a normal mixer control for the front output.
>
> Unfortunately I am unable to find such control myself.
What is the output of "lsusb -v" for this device?
Regards,
Clemens
--
David Vincent-Jones wrote:
> Reference:
> http://www.alsa-project.org/db/?f=b5c0d636c3870da14ab5f4e4c6f5f64d7c906507
>
> I am unable to get my laptop built-in microphone to work.
> Node 0x22 [Audio Mixer] wcaps 0x20010b: Stereo Amp-In
> Connection: 7
> 0x18 0x19 0x1a 0x1b 0x1d 0x0b 0x12
Th
On Fri, 10 Jan 2014 10:16:07 -0500, Dennis New wrote:
> On Sun, 05 Jan 2014 18:08:40 +, Daniel Mack wrote:
> > Dennis New wrote:
> > >For the past many linux kernels,
> >
> > Can you spot the last kernel version that worked for you?
> >
> > >my usb bluetooth headset randomly
> > >crashes --
Dominique;
Trying to follow the web instructions to a 'T'.
1. 'modinfo soundcore' confirms that the module is correctly in place.
2. For safety I used 'modprobe' to insert 'snd-hda-intel' etc looks OK
3. All settings in alsamixer for HDA-Intel-PCH set to maximum
4. Also settings for 'pulse' s
Le Mon, 13 Jan 2014 17:21:09 -0800,
David Vincent-Jones a écrit :
> Thank you Dominique I was able to load both of these modules and
> can confirm that they are now correctly listed. Unfortunately the
> problem remains.
>
You should try to make an ALSA configuration file as explained here
Thank you Dominique I was able to load both of these modules and
can confirm that they are now correctly listed. Unfortunately the
problem remains.
David
On 01/13/2014 04:06 PM, Dominique Michel wrote:
> Le Mon, 13 Jan 2014 12:48:02 -0800,
> David Vincent-Jones a écrit :
>
>> Reference:
>
Le Mon, 13 Jan 2014 12:48:02 -0800,
David Vincent-Jones a écrit :
> Reference:
> http://www.alsa-project.org/db/?f=b5c0d636c3870da14ab5f4e4c6f5f64d7c906507
>
> I am unable to get my laptop built-in microphone to work. I have
> tried a number of solutions offered on the web but none solve the
> p
Hi Clemens,
2014/1/13 Clemens Ladisch
> As you can see in the block diagram, the S/PDIF input can be routed to
> both the S/PDIF output and to the analong front outputs. "Loopback"
> usually means the same kind of connection, so there should be a normal
> mixer control for the front output.
Th
Sun, 12 Jan 2014 18:21:11 +0100
Clemens Ladisch a écrit:
> Jérôme wrote:
> > I'm interested in the Laney IRT-Studio and I can't find any information
> > about its linux compatibility.
> >
> > So it is USB 2.0. This means a specific driver is necessary, right ?
>
> Nowadays, all USB versions are s
Chris, Rutger and list,
I managed to retrieve the kernel tha makes the rPac work. it's the 3.2.0-44
as you can see from aadebug below. Also, below I listed the hw parameters
from this set up since it seems they cannot be setup by the other kernels.
I really would like to understand what needs to b
Reference:
http://www.alsa-project.org/db/?f=b5c0d636c3870da14ab5f4e4c6f5f64d7c906507
I am unable to get my laptop built-in microphone to work. I have tried a
number of solutions offered on the web but none solve the problem.
I am making tests on both Audacity as well as Skype.
Help would be ap
Denis Shulyaka wrote:
> 2) USB sound card based on CM106 chip.
>
> For this to work as a SPDIF receiver I need to somehow connect SPDIF
> IN and analog out.
>
> 1) Configure a loopback on hardware level for the best latency and
>CPU usage
>
> I am currently trying to understand if my hardware s
Hi list,
Please forgive if it's the wrong place to post this question.
I'm trying to build a sound server connected to my speaker set that will
act as:
1) SPDIF receiver from TV
2) Network sound server
My hardware:
1) Raspberry Pi
2) USB sound card based on CM106 chip.
My Software:
1) Raspbian
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