David E. Ross wrote:
YouTube uses Flash. I don't use Amazon Cloud Play, so I don't know what
it uses. In any case, it might be something in the application that
actually captures the stream and sends it to your sound card.
Have you examined the settings in Volume Control (sndvol32.exe or
whatever its Windows 7 equivalent is). In Windows XP, sndvol32.exe has
separate volume settings for Wave, SW Synthesizer, CD Player, and Input
Monitor. I believe the setting for Wave is what controls the volume for
Flash.
Also, under [Start> Settings] in Windows XP, there is a Sounds and
Audio Devices that has volume control. There should be an equivalent
for Windows 7.
David:
Amazon Cloud Player does not use Flash.
But you have solved my problem (or at least given me the clue I needed). In
Windows 7, sndvol32.exe is just sndvol.exe. When I opened it, there was a volume
level setting for SeaMonkey (because SeaMonkey was running) which was set to the
lowest level. Moving it to the highest level made SeaMonkey work much the same
as IE and Chrome.
[I find you can also get the sndvol.exe screen by selecting the volume icon in
the system tray and selecting Mixer.]
Thanks!!! This has been bothering me for a long time.
--
David Wilkinson
_______________________________________________
support-seamonkey mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey