Hi.
Thanks for your answer. How I can define digital or analog input (a
the end, a capturing device) in .asoundrc? I tried some examples, but
I didn't succeed. Can you help me?
Thanks a lot
Cheers
Sim
2008/6/5 [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
> Hi All
>
> I have found that it is best to
Bruno Schneider wrote:
[snip]
> I have only one mic. :)
>
> I'm told to experiment changing parameters to hda-intel module,
> especially trying every possible "model" such as
> "model=3stack-6ch-dig", what do you think of that?
>
>
I think it is worth a try. The idea is that the probe of your
On Mon, 9 Jun 2008, stan wrote:
> Grant wrote:
>> I'm kind of an audiophile and I'd like to make sure there is no
>> digital alteration being made to my music between the time it is
>> decoded from FLAC and passed to the DAC via USB. We could argue about
>> whether it makes a difference, but I'd
On Thu, Jun 5, 2008 at 10:27 PM, stan wrote:
> Have you tried using arecord to see if the changes work there? It could be
> audacity, though it works fine here when I do the equivalent. Well, I'm
> using the 1.3.5 beta.
>
> arecord -d 10 -f cd -t wav -D plughw:0,0 some.wav
I tried arecord, but
Arthur Marsh wrote:
> Hi, I finally installed a Debian snapshot kernel that uses ALSA 1.0.16
> rather than a 1.0.16 release candidate version, and had the pcsp (PC
> speaker) driver block the loading of an nForce2 sound card driver until
> I blacklisted pcsp.
>
> There has been some discussion o
Alexander Carôt wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> can anyone give me an explanation why the blocking delay of a soundcard
> appears twice using the ALSA driver ? E.g. with 48 kHz at 128 samles / frame
> I understand that the capturing process requires 2,6 ms to actually fill one
> block of audio samples (= b
Grant wrote:
> I'm kind of an audiophile and I'd like to make sure there is no
> digital alteration being made to my music between the time it is
> decoded from FLAC and passed to the DAC via USB. We could argue about
> whether it makes a difference, but I'd just like to make sure there is
> a str
On Sun, Jun 8, 2008 at 5:12 AM, "Alexander Carôt"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> can anyone give me an explanation why the blocking delay of a soundcard
> appears twice using the ALSA driver ? E.g. with 48 kHz at 128 samles / frame
> I understand that the capturing process requires 2,6
hi, very thank, a spanish lister is already help me in spanish
- Original Message -
From: "Rene Herman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Juan A Fuentes Bermudez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc:
Sent: Sunday, June 08, 2008 9:38 PM
Subject: Re: [Alsa-user] device order
> On 06-06-08 12:47, Juan A Fu
The creative site shows a PCI card called "Sound Blaster Audigy MP3+"
But it doesn't show/list a USB version.
http://support.creative.com/Products/Products.aspx?catid=1&catName=Sound+Blaster
The alsa site lists a USB device called "Sound Blaster MP3+". It
doesn't list a PCI version.
http://www.a
On 06-06-08 12:47, Juan A Fuentes Bermudez wrote:
> hi, sorry for my englihs
>
> how can set permanent order of this devices:
>
> AD1988 (SND_HDA_INTEL)
> HDMI, integrated in my graphic card ATI (SND_HDA_INTEL)
> Waveterminal 192m (SND_ICE1724)
> EWX24/96 (SND_ICE1712)
>
> now in ubuntu hard
I'm kind of an audiophile and I'd like to make sure there is no
digital alteration being made to my music between the time it is
decoded from FLAC and passed to the DAC via USB. We could argue about
whether it makes a difference, but I'd just like to make sure there is
a straight "pass-through" ha
Hi all,
can anyone give me an explanation why the blocking delay of a soundcard appears
twice using the ALSA driver ? E.g. with 48 kHz at 128 samles / frame I
understand that the capturing process requires 2,6 ms to actually fill one
block of audio samples (= blocking delay of 2,6 ms).
However
Hi, I finally installed a Debian snapshot kernel that uses ALSA 1.0.16
rather than a 1.0.16 release candidate version, and had the pcsp (PC
speaker) driver block the loading of an nForce2 sound card driver until
I blacklisted pcsp.
There has been some discussion on this before in this list but
Hi, I finally installed a Debian snapshot kernel that uses ALSA 1.0.16
rather than a 1.0.16 release candidate version, and had the pcsp (PC
speaker) driver block the loading of an nForce2 sound card driver until
I blacklisted pcsp.
There has been some discussion on this before in this list but
Hello,
I am trying to get flite working on a HP iPAQ of the H2210 type.
System sounds work.
But when I run flite, I get:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/etc$ flite -t "test 1 2 3"
ALSA lib pcm_plug.c:773:(snd_pcm_plug_hw_refine_schange) Unable to find
an usable access for '(null)'
audio_open_alsa: failed to
test
-
Check out the new SourceForge.net Marketplace.
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just about anything Open Source.
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_
Hi, I finally installed a Debian snapshot kernel that uses ALSA 1.0.16
rather than a 1.0.16 release candidate version, and had the pcsp (PC
speaker) driver block the loading of an nForce2 sound card driver until
I blacklisted pcsp.
There has been some discussion on this before in this list but
[repost due to original not appearing]
Hi, I finally installed a Debian snapshot kernel that uses ALSA 1.0.16
rather than a 1.0.16 release candidate version, and had the pcsp (PC
speaker) driver block the loading of an nForce2 sound card driver until
I blacklisted pcsp.
There has been some dis
Hi, I finally installed a Debian snapshot kernel that uses ALSA 1.0.16
rather than a 1.0.16 release candidate version, and had the pcsp (PC
speaker) driver block the loading of an nForce2 sound card driver until
I blacklisted pcsp.
There has been some discussion on this before in this list but
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