Pierre Lorenzon wrote:
> There are two sound card on the system. A chips on the mother
> board which is driven as far as I know by an hda intel driver
> and a PCI xonar STX card.
>
> On the first one mixing is possible : I mean that if a sound
> process as aplay for instance is running and you star
Hi Vladimir,
From: Vladimir Mosgalin
Subject: Re: [Alsa-user] intel hda vs asus xonar STX
Date: Mon, 28 Sep 2015 04:40:28 +0300
> Hi Pierre Lorenzon!
>
> On 2015.09.27 at 19:13:17 +0200, Pierre Lorenzon wrote next:
>
>> In fact I expected such an answer but I would like not use jack
>> o
Hi Pierre Lorenzon!
On 2015.09.27 at 19:13:17 +0200, Pierre Lorenzon wrote next:
> In fact I expected such an answer but I would like not use jack
> or pulse if not necessary. If the asus xonar essence stx is
> able to mix sources there's no need to use more only enable it.
Xonar STX ("AV100" c
Hi,
In fact I expected such an answer but I would like not use jack
or pulse if not necessary. If the asus xonar essence stx is
able to mix sources there's no need to use more only enable it.
Moreover if alsa is able to do the mix softly no need to had
anything to the system.
In this case you'
Perhaps a sound server defaults to use the integrated sound device?
Pulseaudio nowadays seems to be installed as the default sound server by
most Linux distros that provide an out of the box working
desktop environment and even for other distros it's an annoying
dependency. For my Linux installs em
Hi All,
My alsa version is 1.0.27 and my kernel version is 3.10.14.
There are two sound card on the system. A chips on the mother
board which is driven as far as I know by an hda intel driver
and a PCI xonar STX card.
On the first one mixing is possible : I mean that if a sound
process as ap