I played around with the settings and rebooted the machine.  The audio
did not work.  The next day when I booted up, it worked fine.  Hopefully
it has worked the problem out of itself.


Wes



Mr O wrote:

> 'Twas a bit more of a fluke that it worked. Generally speaking, you shouldn't 
> have a problem with that card as it is detected *but* with that quality of 
> hardware it's difficult to say what the exact issue is. Make sure your 
> integrated audio is still disabled as some BIOS's have a tendency to revert 
> back to defaults when power cycling. Other than that, the only thing I 
> invoked in a terminal was 'alsamixer' which is essentially the same as the 
> existing volume controls. You don't have 'alsaconf' installed which is 
> another helpful command line utility for mucking with your sound. Open the 
> package manager (Synaptic) and search for "alsa". Install anything like 
> "alsa-utils" or "alsa-tools". One of those should include 'alsaconf' which 
> you can run from a terminal.
>
>
> --- On Fri, 10/3/08, wes morgan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>   
>> From: wes morgan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> Subject: [Eug-lug] Audio
>> To: "Eugene Unix and Gnu/Linux User Group" <[email protected]>
>> Date: Friday, October 3, 2008, 8:03 PM
>> Hi Mike:
>>
>>     Where was it that you went to in order to get the audio
>> card working?
>>
>>
>> Wes
>>
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