Richard Farthing wrote:
Does anyone know how to make the new Soundblaster USB MP3+ (with the
nice Blue LED) work fully ?
It is recognised as a USB sound card OK - running SuSe Linux 8.1 -
But the mixer doesn't work.
Please post the output of lsusb -v.
Regards,
Clemens
Hello,
I had a problem with my on-board sound (wasn't able to solve it) and
want to buy an additional PCI sound card. The vendor of my computer
does not seem to be well informed about linux compatible sound cards
(he told me that the Soundblaster 128 and Live are no longer available,
but
William M. Quarles wrote:
Here's the information that you requested.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] /]# lsmod
snd-emu10k182260 0 [snd-emu10k1-synth]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] /]# cat /proc/asound/cards
0 [Live ]: EMU10K1 - Sound Blaster Live!
Sound Blaster Live!
At 11:17 2003-06-26 -0600, Sid Kwakkel wrote:
Output of 'aplay -l':
List of PLAYBACK Hardware Devices
card 0: SI7012 [SiS SI7012], device 0: Intel ICH [SiS SI7012]
Subdevices: 1/1
Subdevice #0: subdevice #0
This looks right.
Output of 'aplay mp3/beck/mellow_gold/loser.mp3':
Clemens Ladisch wrote:
William M. Quarles wrote:
Here's the information that you requested.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] /]# lsmod
snd-emu10k182260 0 [snd-emu10k1-synth]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] /]# cat /proc/asound/cards
0 [Live ]: EMU10K1 - Sound Blaster Live!
Sound
Aaron schrieb:
Hi, All
I recently upgraded my kernel to a planet CCRMA one with win4lin as
well.
When I installed Alsa again from src.rpm and ran /sbin/alsaconf I get
the following messege No supported pnp or pci card found.
Of course I had Alsa working superbly prior to this.
I have a
hi, I am hoping someone can help me with this one. I have rebuilt the
ALSA packages for redhat 9 since they would not load the modules properly.
That seemed to fix most of the problems, but it still fails when I
use 'play 1.wav' to test the sound. This is the following message on the
hi, I am hoping someone can help me with this one. I have rebuilt the
ALSA packages for redhat 9 since they would not load the modules properly.
That seemed to fix most of the problems, but it still fails when I
use 'play 1.wav' to test the sound. This is the following message on the
G'day mate!
I'm pretty sure that the 5.1 should be okay, and I'd
suggest using the source code for ALSA and building it
from there, it's not too hard, unless there is kernel
header problems, in which case you'd have some work to
do. ;) Anyway, with source built versions of ALSA, you
can be running