No your message was not wrong, I didn't check symbol for symbol in the
name of the package and pipewire-pulse is an automatic install so it is on
my machine now too.
Jude "There are four boxes to be used in
defense of liberty:
soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed
On 10/10/22 07:15, Christian Schoepplein wrote:
Sorry, maybe my last message contained a typo. The package is called
pipewire-pulse... IMHO without this package no sound would be possible, so I
am sure it is also installed on your system.
It's important. My understanding is that it emulates
On Mon, Oct 10, 2022 at 06:37:43AM -0400, Jude DaShiell wrote:
>Thanks this worked. Though it's possible either my sources.list is
>missing an entry or pipewire.pulse got deprecated and removed from the
>archives.
Sorry, maybe my last message contained a typo. The package is called
t;
> Am 09.10.22 um 16:49 schrieb Jude DaShiell:
> > What should be done to replace pulseaudio with pipewire and have the
> > screen reader come up and talk?
>
> I my case on Debian testing it was enough to remove the pulseaduio package and
> install pipewire, pipewire-pul
Hi,
Am 09.10.22 um 16:49 schrieb Jude DaShiell:
What should be done to replace pulseaudio with pipewire and have the
screen reader come up and talk?
I my case on Debian testing it was enough to remove the pulseaduio
package and install pipewire, pipewire-pulse and wireplumber. After
The bookworm alpha I installed put pulseaudio on this system and others on
the debian-users list are having problems with pulseaudio when it gets
updated.
What should be done to replace pulseaudio with pipewire and have the
screen reader come up and talk? It's possible multimedia
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