Thanks Geof,
How exactly can I do what you are suggesting in GRC?
The only available controls on the audio sink is the bit rate and an entry
called "audio device".
What exactly should I enter in this entry?
thanks again,
Achilleas
On Sat, Nov 5, 2016 at 4:05 PM, Geof Nieboer
Achilleas,
There are several others who had had success, so there must be something
unique in your setup . Do you have more then one audio device installed?
If you do perhaps it is being routed to the wrong audio device. The
default is the windows wave mapper which normally should send it to
On Sun, 2016-04-03 at 13:01 -0400, Andy Walls wrote:
> >On April 3, 2016 11:31:02 AM EDT, Tom Rondeau wrote:
> >>On Sun, Apr 3, 2016 at 11:27 AM, Landsman, Arik wrote:
[snip]
> Here is some good info on how GRNURadio's control port works at a
> >>high
> level:
>
Hi Marcus,
Thanks for your quick reply. I have attached the flowgraph to this e-mail,
so hopefully you can download it now. I have posted my problem also on the
jack forum, but since the error specifically occurs when I am working with
gnuradio and jack (using the selector and/or hierarchical
Hi Sjoerd,
because you used Nabble, only half of your mails end up on the mailing
list. Short: Nabble is a very strange service that you nobody needs if
you have a mail address, just sign up directly for the mailing list
under https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio .
I couldn't
A possible solution could be that the audio sink does not instantiate a
normal jack port, but a 'Jack.ownPort' - which has more options and I
suspect that I would have control over the registration of the ports. Since
I don't have experience with editing existing gnuradio blocks - maybe
someone
Hi Achilleas,
it's nice to be hearing from you :)
So, I know of at least one other person trying [1] to get audio under
Windows to work correctly. At least, he got /choppy/ sound.
I know this isn't great help, but maybe it gives any of you a place to
start :(
Best regards,
Marcus
[1]