On Sun, Feb 02, 2014 at 11:11:08PM +0100, Nils Reuße wrote:
Thank you, that helped! I tried with -v 100 and could listen to 5 songs at
the same time without the volume being changed, that will do it.
Never heared of sound attenuation before though, is the sndiod behaviour a
direct
2014-02-03 Alexandre Ratchov a...@caoua.org:
On Sun, Feb 02, 2014 at 11:11:08PM +0100, Nils ReuÃe wrote:
Thank you, that helped! I tried with -v 100 and could listen to 5 songs
at
the same time without the volume being changed, that will do it.
Never heared of sound attenuation before
Hi bugs@,
sendbug ate my report, so here's it again.
Today i noticed that the sound volume changed a little bit when playing two
files simultaniously (amd64 snapshot from 24.1., dmesg below). I tried
multiple variations of players and files (mplayer and vlc, and mp3, wav and
mp4 sound/video
On Sun, 2 Feb 2014, Nils Reuße wrote:
Today i noticed that the sound volume changed a little bit when playing
two files simultaniously (amd64 snapshot from 24.1., dmesg below). I
tried multiple variations of players and files (mplayer and vlc, and
mp3, wav and mp4 sound/video files), but
Thank you, that helped! I tried with -v 100 and could listen to 5 songs at
the same time without the volume being changed, that will do it.
Never heared of sound attenuation before though, is the sndiod behaviour a
direct requirement of some physical laws?
Nils