On Sat, May 1, 2010 at 22:03, James Stuckey <jhstuc...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> * Native capability of sound card can be found from >> cat /proc/asound/card0/pcm0p/sub0/hw_params >> >> * Decoding is done by the player itself, most probably the decoder >> output format in your case would be 96khz, 24 bit little endian. If >> the native rate of your card is only 44100Hz/48000Hz, it can not >> support this. >> >> * In order to play this format this has to be downsampled. The >> downsamping could be done either by 1) the player itself, but it >> completely depends upon the features and capabilities of the player or >> 2)by the (alsa) driver. >> >> So these are your options. >> * Try out different players as Camaleón suggested. >> >> * Many players allow you to specify the output audio device. >> Try "plughw:0,0" instead of the default one. This is a special device >> given by alsa to do audio processing. >> > > Another possibility would be to down-sample the file and then play it with > mocp. How does one down-sample a .WAV file? > > I tried "mplayer -ao plughw:0,0 file.mp3" but I got: > No such audio driver 'plughw' > No such audio driver '0' > Could not open/initialize audio device -> no sound. > Audio: no sound > > >
You have that option always. Decode it user flac decoder to wave file, then downsample it. You could encode it back to mp3/ogg etc. There are many programs to do downsampling. I think even the lame/oggenc support downsampling. Otherwise install the package "samplerate-programs" and sndfile-resample -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/n2jd0bf7b0b1005011916nda76a074i251e553955140...@mail.gmail.com