On Saturday, 10 December 2016 11:45:03 GMT William R Sowerbutts wrote:
> You can write a udev rule to name the device according to the USB port it is
> plugged into (either on the host or a downstream hub). This should allows
> you to give them persistent names.
>
> Here's an example for serial
You can write a udev rule to name the device according to the USB port it is
plugged into (either on the host or a downstream hub). This should allows you
to give them persistent names.
Here's an example for serial ports, I assume the same can be done for audio
devices:
On Saturday, 10 December 2016 10:14:35 GMT Terry Coles wrote:
> My cunning plan thereby comes crashing around my ears. I only have one of
> the devices here at the moment, but it advertises iSerial as '0', so I've
> no doubt the others will also be called that.
>
> The system will be run
On Saturday, 10 December 2016 00:44:51 GMT Ralph Corderoy wrote:
> Terry has two USB audio adapters plugged in and wants to always play one
> track so it comes out of the "left" one and the other track to emit from
> the "right" regardless of the order they were enumerated by Linux.
> They're the
Hi,
Peter wrote:
> And from the discussions with Ralph [and Tim] about my HTML
> program/CSS and Javascript, I have taken out a whole pile of stuff and
> it works just the same.
The stuff before the braces is a CSS selector that specifies what the
braces' contents affect.
Only from my point of view.
As discussed with CPK I have found out how to use Dolphin in Kubuntu to
sftp into my Raspberry Pi. At the moment it is taking forever, but I
will try again later.
And from the discussions with Ralph about my HTML program/CSS and
Javascript, I have taken out a
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