Bill Unruh schrieb:
> On Thu, 22 Mar 2007, Ingo Müller wrote:
>
>> Quote: "Fascism is an authoritarian political ideology and mass movement
>> that seeks to place the nation (defined in exclusive biological,
>> cultural, and historical terms) above all other loyalties." (Enlglish
>> Wikipedia)
>
Hi,
Is there a means of globally associating applications (by executable name
and/or path, say) with default ALSA hardware? I have looked around, but
without success.
What I have in mind is a GUI control program that presents a list of items,
each of which associates an application with a def
On 3/23/07, Steve White <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Is there a means of globally associating applications (by executable name
> and/or path, say) with default ALSA hardware? I have looked around, but
> without success.
>
No. This has to be done by the application.
Lee
I've been trying to fix the audio on my Lenovo n100, model 768 for a while.
I've seen a many suggestions such as patching the ACPI DSDT, adding module
parameters, etc, but so far nothing has worked, except turning off ACPI, which
also disables cpu scaling. I'm using kernel 2.6.20.3 with the 1.0
On Fri, 23 Mar 2007, Ingo Müller wrote:
Bill Unruh schrieb:
On Thu, 22 Mar 2007, Ingo Müller wrote:
Quote: "Fascism is an authoritarian political ideology and mass movement
that seeks to place the nation (defined in exclusive biological,
cultural, and historical terms) above all other loyal
Using Ubuntu Edgy with Nvidia nForce2 driver.
If I go to System>Preferences>Sound I have a number of choices for sound
devices:
Autodetect (the default)
Nvidia nForce2 - IEC958
Nvidia nForce2
ALSA
ESD
OSS
When I press the test button I get the tone. However, by selecting each
option, one by one
On 3/23/07, Baasha <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Using Ubuntu Edgy with Nvidia nForce2 driver.
>
> If I go to System>Preferences>Sound I have a number of choices for sound
> devices:
> Autodetect (the default)
> Nvidia nForce2 - IEC958
> Nvidia nForce2
> ALSA
> ESD
> OSS
> When I press the test butt
Ingo's solution gets my vote. I AM a programmer, and I have written
kernel code, hotplug scripts, etc. Nobody is taking those away. The
default is simply being made more sensible. Writing a new script for
every sound card, or figuring out a nice regex to write one script for
multiple cards, is
On Fri, 23 Mar 2007, Michael Bourgeous wrote:
> Ingo's solution gets my vote. I AM a programmer, and I have written
> kernel code, hotplug scripts, etc. Nobody is taking those away. The
> default is simply being made more sensible. Writing a new script for
> every sound card, or figuring out a