Fedora 10 does not use esd, it uses pulseaudio.
You can restart pulseaudio using "killall -9 pulseaudio; pulseaudio
&", though I suspect that the first command will be useless if
pulseaudio is already dead. Note: I have not experienced this problem
with the emulator on either F9 or F10, so there may be a configuration
issue with your sound system, or, you may have been lax in your
updates. I suggest that if you have not done so recently, that you
perform a full update, in particular, kernel, pulseaudio, alsa, and
any related components.

On Mar 16, 7:37 am, David Turner <[email protected]> wrote:
> This is most likely due to buggy EsounD daemon, try "killall -9 esd" then
> restart it (with whatever script is used on Fedora)
>
> On Mon, Mar 16, 2009 at 7:09 AM, Pd <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > When closing the emulator it completely kills the sound system.  The
> > only thing that fixes this is a complete re-boot.  Anyone else see this
> > behaviour?
>
> > Pd.
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