On Mon, 03 Sep 2012 10:11:37 -0700, peasthope wrote: > From: Camaleon <noela...@gmail.com> > Date: Mon, 3 Sep 2012 14:00:21 +0000 (UTC) >> You mean the name enclosed in brackes, the card identifier? > > Yes, the names "SI7012", "default" and "default_1". > >> I don't know ... your final goal ... > > Aiming to have sound work. =8~)
Oh, then I my first thought was wrong. I thought you simply wanted to rename the devices because of some obscure reason >:-) > [Old boring background story. > Two desktop PCs running Squeeze. Each machine has the mainboard audio > chipset, a USB C-Media headset and USB C-Media speakers. On one system > audio mostly works. On the other system, Skype and Twoinkle work but > never a sound from VLC or from Iceweasel.] Then you will have to Google by "vlc linux sound device" or something in that shape :-P (hint: vlc --aout="..." ---alsa-audio-device="...") > Seems that unambiguous identification of devices is a necessary > condition for sound functionality. The possibility of multiple sound > devices is acknowledged in the documentation now; so the situation is > improving. Well, yes. When you have different sound cards/devices you have to: 1/ Choose the system's default one. 2/ Change the device for every application where you want to use a different card other than the default. IIRC, this has been discussed several times here, in this mailing list. There's a good doc about it here: How can I change the default ALSA device? http://alsa.opensrc.org/FAQ026 >> http://alsa.opensrc.org/Udev > > Much more information than http://wiki.debian.org/SoundFAQ; which has > one less sentence now that a dead link is gone. Will study and see what > can be gleaned. > > Incidentally, in the days of the ISA bus, "sound card" was appropriate > terminology. Today, referring to a little USB audio adapter or a chip > set on a system board as a "card" mokes no sense. Well, those modern USB audio devices (like the headsets) can be more powerful than most of the Intel HDA embedded chipsets :-P > Time to adopt a realistic term. "Audio adapter" or "audio device"? > One chunk of hardware can have multiple "devices" making "audio device" > too ambiguous. "Audio adapter" isn't a good term for an onboard > chipset. Any ideas for a good term? I think it's still needed to differentiate between the hardware (physical) device (USB external card, pci card, USB headset...) and the used chipset so the old nomenclature is fine with me (sound card/sound device and sound card/device chipset). Greetings, -- Camaleón -- 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/k22rb6$vnl$1...@ger.gmane.org