@bod_: Alsa is a part of the kernel that provides for sound drivers and
direct access to sound hardware. Pulseaudio is a sound server. Two
completely different things.

I can confirm this bug (especially Flash plugin seems to be devoid of
sound when running Rhythmbox, for example). When using the
/etc/asound.conf workaround mentioned above, I can at least use
rhythmbox and have Gnome sound at the same time.

By itself, to me (but I am a layman in this subject), this seems like a
conflict between apps that use Pulse and apps that use Alsa directly.
The Alsa apps either get locked out by Pulse or lock Pulse out. If that
is so, this is not a bug, but simply the way things work and a design
fault on the side of the Ubuntu Hardy architects: it is possible to work
around this, at least partially. For afaik, Fedora has been doing
Pulseaudio for some time now, and I do not remember having trouble with
Pulseaudio there. Devs might want to check out the way Fedora has
tackled this problem. They must have a workaround for apps that want to
use Alsa directly too. Don't know about Skype though. Hardly use it.

-- 
Default ALSA device must use PulseAudio, otherwise ALSA applications may fail
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/198453
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