On Sun, 2004-10-24 at 22:10 -0700, John L Fjellstad wrote: > Eric Gaumer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > I think you are confusing the two. Alsa is a sound architecture but > > esound is a sound daemon. Alsa makes sounds where as esound plays more > > of a traffic cop role. Bottom line is that they serve two different > > purposes when dealing with sound. Alsa plays the driver or module role. > > Someday it might be able to do the job of a sound daemon as well but I > > don't think this is the intent of the project. > > I thought the never ALSA could play the role of 'traffic cop'? As in, > it can get input from different streams and then merge them before > sending it to the soundcard. > > Or does sound daemons do more?
Alsa cannot play multiple audio streams simultaneously. From what I understand, this is more of a hardware limitation than an alsa limitation. They claim that some sound cards can do automatic hardware mixing. If your card can't do this then there is a plugin called "dmix" that does software mixing (i.e. allow sounds to play simultaneously) . I've never tried it. Just search "alsa dmix" for plenty of how-to's. I would imagine just using esd or arts would be easier and work flawlessly at the moment. I think a lot of Gnome apps are probably programmed to use esound. Give it a try... it can't hurt. I'm no sound expert by any means so take this with a grain of salt... -- Eric Gaumer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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