On 23 Nov 2000 09:19:54 -0600, Timmy Douglas said:
> > And how do I configure my soundcard?
>
> you need to compile a kernel with sound support and with the card you
> have. or you could get alsa modules, but that might be too much
> work...
Too much work, that is why I bought the commerc
Tóth Gábor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi!
> I'm a new one, so where can I find an archive of this list?
www.debian.org.. click on support, mailing llist, and archives i think.
> And how do I configure my soundcard?
you need to compile a kernel with sound support and with the card you
have.
Hi!
I'm a new one, so where can I find an archive of this list?
And how do I configure my soundcard?
It need a kernel module, or just a program?
Thanks
Dzsi
Hi there!
I have a problem with my soundcard. This card is based on Opti9xx chipset. So
the problem is, that sometimes it works properly (so I can play/hear music
well, it makes fine sounds of the built-in sounds of enlightenment, for
instance) but after a while it almost crashes, I mean sharp
Quoth Robert Waldner,
> another approach would be to browse through /proc/[pci,ioports,dma,irq]
> and/or fingering around with pnpdump for ISA-cards.
In my experience, in a lot of cases you won't see anything in /proc (and
it's interupts, not irq) unless you actually have a driver loaded for
the
i have a sound card MX300 diamond and would like to know hp
I would like to know how to enable sound in linux, thanks
direct email is always welcome
thanks
I used make install20 as indicated in the documentation.
Alan Sobey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> on 07/11/2000 10:45:09
Pour :debian-user@lists.debian.org
cc : (ccc : Yves Pocchiola/ALCATEL-SPACE)
Objet : Re: Réf. : Re: Sound Card: Turtle Beach Montego A3D 64 Voice PCI
On Tue,
On Tue, Nov 07, 2000 at 09:51:43AM +0100, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> I have found 2 drivers for my Sound Card at the indicated adresses ( one
> proposed by the manufacturer and one more advanced version proposed at source
> -forge ). Unfortunatly compilation fails on Debian 2.2
I have found 2 drivers for my Sound Card at the indicated adresses ( one
proposed by the manufacturer and one more advanced version proposed at source
-forge ). Unfortunatly compilation fails on Debian 2.2 for the two drivers.
Source-forge indicates that its version has been validated on red-hat
On Mon, Nov 06, 2000 at 10:49:35AM -0500, Andy Bastien wrote:
> There are those who would have you believe that [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >
> >
> > Dear community,
> >
> > I' ve a Sound Card: Turtle Beach Montego A3D 64 Voice PCI (with a DELL
> >
There are those who would have you believe that [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>
> Dear community,
>
> I' ve a Sound Card: Turtle Beach Montego A3D 64 Voice PCI (with a DELL
> computer). The Turtle Beach device drivers proposed by Debian 2.2 are for
> other
> types of
Dear community,
I' ve a Sound Card: Turtle Beach Montego A3D 64 Voice PCI (with a DELL
computer). The Turtle Beach device drivers proposed by Debian 2.2 are for other
types of cards and don't work. Chipset is Aureal AU8820 and AC'97 Codec
according the documentation.
Perhaps s
Debianistas
I have finally decided to venture into sound on debian. The card is one
of the cs461x flavor, and I have a number of questions that I would like to
direct to someone who has sound working with that specific type of card,
because it appears to have some idiosyncracies not shared by ot
>Hi,all,
>
> My sound card is cmpci8738 .After I installed Debian 2.2 ,I recompiled the
kernel
>and the module for my sound card is installed properly when the system boots.
For weeks
>I can enjoy mp3 with mp3blaster and change volume with aumix ,but now I can not
hear
>a
Hi,all,
My sound card is cmpci8738 .After I installed Debian 2.2 ,I recompiled the
kernel
and the module for my sound card is installed properly when the system boots.
For weeks
I can enjoy mp3 with mp3blaster and change volume with aumix ,but now I can not
hear
anything at all.The
Which model do you have? 3c???
Bob Edwards <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
: (2) have a 3 Comm Fast Etherlink XL 10/100 ethernet card which is not
: one of the choices in modconf, how can I configure my ethernet card ?
: --
: Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null
--
On Tue, Oct 10, 2000 at 09:26:38PM -0500, Bob Edwards wrote:
> Greetings,
>
> (1) my sound card is a creative soundblaster PCI 128, how do I configure
> it for debian ?
opensource.creative.com should have something on it.
> (2) have a 3 Comm Fast Etherlink XL 10/100 etherne
Greetings,
(1) my sound card is a creative soundblaster PCI 128, how do I configure
it for debian ?
(2) have a 3 Comm Fast Etherlink XL 10/100 ethernet card which is not
one of the choices in modconf, how can I configure my ethernet card ?
I know it works with debian, because when I tried
Francois Fayard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
FF> I own a AC97 PCI Audio sound card built in my main board.
I've had decent luck with a similar configuration using ALSA, using
the snd-card-via686a module.
FF> I've tried to load the ac97_codec module with modconf.
FF> Here
Hi,
I own a AC97 PCI Audio sound card built in my main board.
I've tried to load the ac97_codec module with modconf.
Here is the list of my modules loaded in my kernel
Module Size Used by
ppp_deflate38988 1 (autoclean)
bsd_comp3828 0 (auto
I have this line in my /etc/modutils/arch/i386
options sb io=0x220 irq=5 dma=1 dma16=5 mpu_io=0x330
Try putting this in and running update-modules. May require a reboot for isapnp
to load again :-\
NOTE: That line matches my settings in /etc/isapnp.conf so you /may/ have to
change a couple of t
> that's in the machine is a modem on ttyS1 IRQ3 (not PnP, set by jumpers);
> > and it doesn't seem like that should be the case anyway, since I haven't
> > switched any jumpers since I had Red Hat.
> >
> > I can't seem to figure out what I'm missing
"Brian J. Dumont" wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I have a PII-333 machine with a Soundblaster Awe64 Gold installed. I had
> been running Redhat 6.1 for a couple years with the soundcard functioning
> properly (so I think the hardware is OK). I recently wiped the drive and
> have installed Debian 2.2 instea
Hi,
I have a PII-333 machine with a Soundblaster Awe64 Gold installed. I had
been running Redhat 6.1 for a couple years with the soundcard functioning
properly (so I think the hardware is OK). I recently wiped the drive and
have installed Debian 2.2 instead, but I cannot seem to get the soundca
MS> I think I have tried everything, maybe my sound card is not fully
MS> supported? I have a motherboard with built-in soundpro
MS> (CMI8330). The sound is working with the exception of the cd
MS> audio. I know the cd is working because I can use the phone plug
M
Mark Schiltz wrote:
> I think I have tried everything, maybe my sound card is not fully supported? I
> have a motherboard with built-in soundpro (CMI8330). The sound is working with
> the exception of the cd audio. I know the cd is working because I can use the
> phone plug on the
On Mon, 18 Sep 2000, David Z. Maze wrote:
> Mark Schiltz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> MS> I think I have tried everything, maybe my sound card is not fully
> MS> supported? I have a motherboard with built-in soundpro
> MS> (CMI8330). The sound is working with the exce
Mark Schiltz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
MS> I think I have tried everything, maybe my sound card is not fully
MS> supported? I have a motherboard with built-in soundpro
MS> (CMI8330). The sound is working with the exception of the cd
MS> audio. I know the cd is working because I
I think I have tried everything, maybe my sound card is not fully supported? I
have a motherboard with built-in soundpro (CMI8330). The sound is working with
the exception of the cd audio. I know the cd is working because I can use the
phone plug on the face of the cdrom.
Any Ideas?
--
I
Under Kernel 2.2.14 the following is effective:
The critical kernel compile settings are:
grep SOUND config-2.2.14 | grep -v not
CONFIG_SOUND=m
CONFIG_SOUND_OSS=m
CONFIG_SOUND_SB=m
CONFIG_SOUND_YM3812=m
CONFIG_LOWLEVEL
Following advice in:
/usr/src/linux-2.4-test7/Documentation/sound/ESS
/usr/src
and it should work. then re-run
isapnp.
> i can get the soundcard to work using the OSS commercial sound drivers, but
> for some reason, they seem to be incompatible with quake 3, and the kernel
> sound drivers work fine with it (this was when i was using the creative
> PCI-128 sound card
i have an awe64 gold sound card, and i'm having a heck of a time configuring
it. part of the problem is that the instructions given in the debian
package seem to be out of date, and isapnp is a subject i know very little
about.
i followed the instructions to the letter, but am on shaky g
Hello,
how do I configure a soundcard (is there anything like sndconfig in RedHat)?
How should I
set dma irq etc?
thanks in advance
it up--it's pretty easy, just pick a card and tell it what
settings
(irq, ioport, dma). After that, all the users you want to have access to sound
you have
to add to the audio group.
Peter Fedichev wrote:
> Hello!
>
> have anyone ever managed to get sound working with ES1869 sound
Hello!
have anyone ever managed to get sound working with ES1869 sound card? I've been
using
RedHat and gave up with it. Since recently I installed Debian 2.2 and got the
same
problem again. Do any of you know the way out or maybe there is a place
somewhere to
read about configuring a
On Wed, 6 Sep 2000, Glyn Millington wrote:
> Hi folks - I'm on Debian Potato and I'm trying to set up for
> sound. My sound card is a CMI8738. Has anyone managed to get
> one of these working, and if so which driver did you use?
Well, I succeeded after I recompiled the ke
Hi folks - I'm on Debian Potato and I'm trying to set up for
sound. My sound card is a CMI8738. Has anyone managed to get
one of these working, and if so which driver did you use?
on related topic:- during boot-up I'm getting a "No CD-Rom drive
foun
Hello,
> I have the Intel SE440BK-2 motherboard with the onboard yamaha sound
> chpiset. I haven't managed to get it to work with linux.
> Does anyone have any expirience with getting this onboad sound card to
> work with linux, or has any idea where to start?
Yes it works but
> I have the Intel SE440BK-2 motherboard with the onboard yamaha sound
> chpiset. I haven't managed to get it to work with linux.
> Does anyone have any expirience with getting this onboad sound card to
> work with linux, or has any idea where to start?
Have you tried in the
Hello
I have the Intel SE440BK-2 motherboard with the onboard yamaha sound
chpiset. I haven't managed to get it to work with linux.
Does anyone have any expirience with getting this onboad sound card to
work with linux, or has any idea where to start?
Thank you
Micha Feigin
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hello,
Debian Ghost here.
Trying to get a crystal 4232 based sound card to work.
I have just compiled a new kernel 2.2.15 and run potato 2.2.
For some reason, I did not see the option to choose a module for crystal 4232
sound card in the 'make config'. I've seen one before, but
umm, you´ve posted your question to the "Debian GNU/Linux" list, which
is quite surely *not* the right place to ask Window$ NT questions ;-)
&rw
On Sun, 13 Aug 2000 15:36:22 PDT, "Ali Balandy" writes:
>I've got an Opti 82C93 sound card, but I can't find th
I've got an Opti 82C93 sound card, but I can't find the driver. I am running
Windows NT 4. can you tell me where I can download the right driver.
thanks for your help
Ali Balandy
Computer Support Technician
Information & Computing Services
Vancouver Community College
Tel:
On 11-Aug-2000 cam wrote:
> hello,
>
> I've tried unsuccessfully to get my Aureal sound card (8810 chipset) to
> work. When I attempt to install the drivers I get the following error:
>
> make install AUCHIP=AU8810
> make[1]: Entering directory `/usr/src/au88xx-1.0.5&
hello,
I've tried unsuccessfully to get my Aureal sound card (8810 chipset) to
work. When I attempt to install the drivers I get the following error:
make install AUCHIP=AU8810
make[1]: Entering directory `/usr/src/au88xx-1.0.5'
mv -f /etc/modules.conf /etc/modules.conf.old
gawk -
Here is the error message I recieve when I attempt to install Aureal
sound drivers:
/sbin/modprobe au8810
/lib/modules/2.2.15/misc/au8810.o: init_module: Device or resource busy
Hint: this error can be caused by incorrect module parameters, including
invalid IO or IRQ parameters
/lib/modules/2.2
i have installed the aureal drivers with success in the past it would
help if you include any errors in the email that the system gives you
nate
On Sat, 29 Jul 2000, Justin Camblin wrote:
cam_ra >Hello,
cam_ra >
cam_ra >I'm having trouble getting my sound card to work at
cam_r
> I have an Aureal Vortex pci sound card. I downloaed the drivers from Aureal's
> website (v.1.0.5) followed the instrutions and even rebuilt my kernel with
> sound support. However, my sound card still doesn't work. Any suggestions
> would be appreciate
Hello,
I'm having trouble getting my sound card to work at
all.
I have an Aureal Vortex pci sound card. I downloaed
the drivers from Aureal's website (v.1.0.5) followed
the instrutions and even rebuilt my kernel with sound
support. However, my sound card still doesn't work.
Hello List,
I've recently installed a sound card in my system and have some
questions about the set-up. The card was given to me by a friend as "an
old soundblaster" - it's ISA and has a number of identifiable jumpers -
IRQ, I/O address etc. I first put it into a W95 box t
,
> I want to add a sound card (SoundBlaster16) and want to make sure I
> have the step right. I have compiled the kernel for pnp support. When
> I look in Sound options, I cant see my sound card. Which driver
> should I choose? My sound is a old Soundblaster 16 ISA card. And
> sho
On Sat, 15 Jul 2000, Jay Kelly wrote:
> Ok group,
> I want to add a sound card (SoundBlaster16) and want to make sure I
> have the step right. I have compiled the kernel for pnp support. When
> I look in Sound options, I cant see my sound card. Which driver
> should I choose? My
Ok group,
I want to add a sound card (SoundBlaster16) and want to make sure I
have the step right. I have compiled the kernel for pnp support. When
I look in Sound options, I cant see my sound card. Which driver
should I choose? My sound is a old Soundblaster 16 ISA card. And
should I select
Does any body have this, or knows how to get it?
Is not supported by ALSA, yet.
Thanks,
antonio.
I was trying to avoid recompiling because at the moment my only Linux box is
this 120 mega byte disk machine so I don't want to install any more than
absolutely necessary. I'm not sure I have room for the sources and gcc. I
finally found a how-to for alsa. A cursory glance at it suggests that
"Kevin Whitefoot" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I used dselect to install alsu-utils and eveything else named alsa except
> the source. Ran also-config (or some similar name) and it created a startup
> script. I ran the script and tried to run aplayer and the other utils but
> all of them say
I have installed a minimal Hamm on a Compaq Prolinea 486 with 120M disk and
an SB compatible sound card (yes I know that they are not always as
compatible as all that but I haven't got far enough to worry about that, I
think).
I used dselect to install alsu-utils and eveything else named
hello everybody
my sound card is Creative PCI 128 digital, some times ago, i
had post some question about it. and people told me to use
a newer kernel, so i update the kernel from 2.0.38 to 2.2.14.
question 1. i shall use Creative es1371 or the OSS one?
question 2. i
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Wed, May 03, 2000 at 10:28:01PM +0100, Jonathan Heaney wrote:
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >
> > > I'm using the 2.2.14 kernel on an Asus k7V mb(Athlon), and have compiled
> ...
>
> > Compiling the OSS driver direct into the kernel should be OK; try and get
> > tha
I read about you requesting an ESS1869 driver and i am wondering if you have
it.
If you do, can you please send it to me.
Thanks. Ken CHoi
Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com
At 08:45 AM 5/5/00 -0700, you wrote:
>Hello all,
>
>After nearly deciding to settle for the commercial sound drivers, yet
>another post from this list (thanks all!) urged me to retry the ALSA
>drivers. I went back and again compiled the latest source after fully
>cleaning out my system. What made
Hello all,
After nearly deciding to settle for the commercial sound drivers, yet
another post from this list (thanks all!) urged me to retry the ALSA
drivers. I went back and again compiled the latest source after fully
cleaning out my system. What made the difference this time was discovering
t
At 10:25 PM 5/3/00 -0700, Chris Baker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> On Wed, May 03, 2000 at 05:25:14PM -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> > Did you compile in the 'sound' module or leave it as a module? I've seen
...
>> Yes. The es1371 driver is compiled directly in
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Wed, May 03, 2000 at 05:25:14PM -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > Did you compile in the 'sound' module or leave it as a module? I've seen
> > these symptoms once when the 'sound' module was not loaded.
>
> Yes. The es1371 driver is compiled directly into the
On Wed, May 03, 2000 at 10:28:01PM +0100, Jonathan Heaney wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> > I'm using the 2.2.14 kernel on an Asus k7V mb(Athlon), and have compiled
...
> Compiling the OSS driver direct into the kernel should be OK; try and get that
> working before attempting the switch to
On Wed, May 03, 2000 at 05:25:14PM -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Did you compile in the 'sound' module or leave it as a module? I've seen
> these symptoms once when the 'sound' module was not loaded.
Yes. The es1371 driver is compiled directly into the kernel. I recompiled
the kernel (as an
Did you compile in the 'sound' module or leave it as a module? I've seen
these symptoms once when the 'sound' module was not loaded.
Gregg Berkholtz
On Wed, May 03, 2000 at 10:19:16AM -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I'm using the 2.2.14 kernel on an Asus k7V mb(Athlon), and have compiled
> int
On Wed, May 03, 2000 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> The ALSA install put every module they support into there. I modified
> /etc/modutils/alias to try both the ens1370 and ens1371 modules. The 1370
> failed to detect anything. The 1371 did, but still no sound.
have a look at the ALSA FAQ at www.al
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I'm using the 2.2.14 kernel on an Asus k7V mb(Athlon), and have compiled
> into the kernel the ES1371 sound driver. On bootup the card is detected at
> irq 10 and a memory address of 0x9000 (which does NOT happen with the
> ES1370 driver).
>
> I have added myself (as a
At 01:16 PM 5/3/00 -0600, you wrote:
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>
>> I'm using the 2.2.14 kernel on an Asus k7V mb(Athlon), and have compiled
>> into the kernel the ES1371 sound driver. On bootup the card is detected at
...
>Did you add ens1370 to /etc/modules? I know I've made that mistake
>bef
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> I'm using the 2.2.14 kernel on an Asus k7V mb(Athlon), and have compiled
> into the kernel the ES1371 sound driver. On bootup the card is detected at
> irq 10 and a memory address of 0x9000 (which does NOT happen with the
> ES1370 driver).
>
> I have added myself (as
I'm using the 2.2.14 kernel on an Asus k7V mb(Athlon), and have compiled
into the kernel the ES1371 sound driver. On bootup the card is detected at
irq 10 and a memory address of 0x9000 (which does NOT happen with the
ES1370 driver).
I have added myself (as a normal user) to the audio and cdrom g
Quoth Robert Waldner,
> another approach would be to browse through /proc/[pci,ioports,dma,irq]
> and/or fingering around with pnpdump for ISA-cards.
In my experience, in a lot of cases you won't see anything in /proc (and
it's interupts, not irq) unless you actually have a driver loaded for
the
On Mon, 01 May 2000 03:54:21 PDT, John Bagdanoff writes:
>On Sat, Apr 29, 2000 at 05:04:39PM +1000, Douglas M. Hespe wrote:
>> On Thu, Apr 27, 2000 at 02:55:32PM +0200, Kent Nyberg wrote (inter alia):
>>
>> > Just set the right dma and irq stuff, and it will work.
>>
>> Does anyone know how to fi
On Sat, Apr 29, 2000 at 05:04:39PM +1000, Douglas M. Hespe wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 27, 2000 at 02:55:32PM +0200, Kent Nyberg wrote (inter alia):
>
> > Just set the right dma and irq stuff, and it will work.
>
> Does anyone know how to find out these things without resort to MSD,
> the Micro$oft Diag
On Thu, Apr 27, 2000 at 02:55:32PM +0200, Kent Nyberg wrote (inter alia):
> Just set the right dma and irq stuff, and it will work.
Does anyone know how to find out these things without resort to MSD,
the Micro$oft Diagnostics. My machine is pure Debian 2.1r4 and,
although I could probably borr
Try using the MAD16 in kernel->sound.
In think i read it in the Documentation dir or in the help info in
menuconfig.
My old OPTI soundcard worked that way.
Just set the right dma and irq stuff, and it will work.
Once upon a time someone wrote:
> Hey,
>
> I got this sound card
Hey,
I got this sound card with an OPTi 92C933 chip on it. I was reading the
kernel documentation for 2.2.14 (the kernel I'm using), and it said that
the OPTi 92C931 chip was supported. I was wondering what the chances of
my card working are? The number is pretty close. I'm runnin
Does anybody have this card and sound working? Thanx
AR
Dear debian user,
I am stuck with a Yamaha YMF724F chipset based PCI sound card
for which I can't find a driver in Linux. If you have any information about
getting this card to work in Linux you may please inform me.
OSS/Free and ALSA does not have an official driver for this
ch
Jaye Inabnit ke6sls wrote:
>
> Hello all,
>
> I'm new to this list. I installed debian after I lost my original hard drive
> to
> power fault. The original box was built by my brother and sound card worked
> great.
>
> I used the CD's to install and t
Hello all,
I'm new to this list. I installed debian after I lost my original hard drive to
power fault. The original box was built by my brother and sound card worked
great.
I used the CD's to install and then upgraded kernal to 2.2.14. During the
proccess, my sound card didn
Hay Eric,
without details on what you tried and what you have it's a bit
difficult to guess what anwser you need:) But I like guessing so...
You need a driver to be able to print. In stock debian systems
such a driver is compiled as a module named lp. You have to tell
the system to use this modul
Hi there, it doesn't matter what distribution you use to get things things
working because you have to do the same things for each distribution that
you try. to get things like sound and printing you have to compile them
into the kernel. I forget the exact configuration to get things
working. but l
I have had Debian for about two years and never have
been able to get my printer configured. Everytime I
try to print I get "operation not supported by device"
from the command line and a reference to "character
modules not found" in xconsole.
So I thought , let me try another Distro that's based
Hi am looking for the site to download this LWHA151910
yamaha card as I lost my disc
Gregory Jonathan West Looking for info on the
families:FISH - BUCHANAN - HARRISIn Parry Sound - Brockville -
Sherbrooke/Haldimand near lake Erie.From early 1800's up to the
WWII.ICQ- 16939283EMAIL- [EMAIL
hello
thanks for reading this mail
which sound controller must i choose in the kernel configuration for
making work the following notebook ?
Texas Instruments 5300
which has a:
Media Vision Pro Audio De Luxe/ProSonic/Jazz 16 sound card
i pressume that the sound controller is
Good morning Dave, or anyone, really, that might like an easy problem
to resolve.
I'm having a couple problems I'd like to sort out. I've got a 400mhx
celery chip, w/64 meg ram, a Sound Blaster Live! card, a modem, hard
drive, and other assorted paraphanalia (even a generic Jensen microphone!),
anyone has a sound card like please write for me with your
isapnp.conf and /etc/modules.
Thanks, Paulo Henrique
Quoting Paul J. Keenan ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> Hola Paulo,
>
> I checked /usr/src/linux/Documentation and found a document
> called ESS ... I've attached
rd's chip.
Use the source,
Paul
Paulo Henrique Baptista de Oliveira wrote:
>
> Hi all,
> I'm installing Debian in an old Pentium 100 that I dont have the
> specifications and my friends tell me that there is an onboard sound card.
> I tried a p
Hi all,
I'm installing Debian in an old Pentium 100 that I dont have the
specifications and my friends tell me that there is an onboard sound card.
I tried a pnpdump > /etc/isapn.conf and then isapnp /etc/isapnp.conf and
the result is:
bash:~# isa
On Sat, Nov 27, 1999 at 02:11:34PM -0500, Antonio Rodriguez wrote:
> Does any body know of any support for Aztech 3D sound card? I haven't
> been able to hear any sound in my Linux-slink box yet. Except for beeps.
What kind of Aztech 3D have you got? If it is the WaveRider 3D PnP, then
Does any body know of any support for Aztech 3D sound card? I haven't
been able to hear any sound in my Linux-slink box yet. Except for beeps.
Thanks
Antonio.
I am going crazy trying to get my sound card to be recognized!!!
I am using slink and pulled the latest kernel sources off of the 2
official
cd-roms. I used the pnpdump tool to determine the base address, IRQ's,
etc of my card (a 3 year old Ensoniq Soundscape VIVO). I put these
into a
I have an Aztech 3D sound card. Is it supported that you know? I didn't
see it in the list of supported hardware.
Thanx
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
On 11 Nov 1999, Eberhard Burr wrote:
> Phil Brutsche <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > > i had installed a PINE Schubert 3D 16 Bit ISA PnP sound card, which has
> > > a CS4235 chip, i am using a 2.2.1 kernel
>
> If you hav
On Thu, Nov 11, 1999 at 01:04:25AM +0100, erasmo perez wrote:
> hello everybody:
>
> i had installed a PINE Schubert 3D 16 Bit ISA PnP sound card, which has
> a CS4235 chip, i am using a 2.2.1 kernel
>
> i get the following /dev/sndstat:
>
> ---
>
> $ cat /proc/s
On 11 Nov 1999, Eberhard Burr wrote:
Eberha >
Eberha >If you have more than 16MB of main memory, you cannot use modules as
Eberha >driver for ISA sound cards. Try compiling it into the kernel and say
Eberha >yes to persistent DMA buffers in the config.
you can still compile persistant DMA buffers
Phil Brutsche <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > i had installed a PINE Schubert 3D 16 Bit ISA PnP sound card, which has
> > a CS4235 chip, i am using a 2.2.1 kernel
If you have more than 16MB of main memory, you cannot use modules as
driver for ISA sound cards. Try compiling it i
A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far way, someone said...
> hello everybody:
>
> i had installed a PINE Schubert 3D 16 Bit ISA PnP sound card, which has
> a CS4235 chip, i am using a 2.2.1 kernel
>
> i get the following /dev/sndstat:
>
[snip]
>
> it seems
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