>
> Iceweasel itself shouldn't grab the soundcard if your
> not on a site that uses
> flash for audio. If you close the webpage after listening
> to flash audio the
> soundcard is still in the "being used" state,
> correct?
>
> Try these two commands below, which should show what is
> using
On Sunday 10 May 2009 20:27, Dr. Jennifer Nussbaum wrote:
> > > And opening up a new browser, sound doesnt work in
> >
> > that one either. As
> >
> > > long as the original browser is open, weather or not
> >
> > theres sound
> >
> > > playing, nothing else can get sound.
> > >
> > > does that hel
> > And opening up a new browser, sound doesnt work in
> that one either. As
> > long as the original browser is open, weather or not
> theres sound
> > playing, nothing else can get sound.
>
> > does that help narrow things down?
>
> One thing you could try is editing
> /etc/iceweasel/iceweas
> And opening up a new browser, sound doesnt work in that one either. As
> long as the original browser is open, weather or not theres sound
> playing, nothing else can get sound.
> does that help narrow things down?
One thing you could try is editing /etc/iceweasel/iceweaselrc and changing
the
> Right now on my Debian unstable system, i run Pulseaudio (for good USB audio
> support). Recently many things have stopped working. I can watch YouTube
> videos with sound, and click on MP3s and hear them, both from within FireFox.
> But when I open up another browser at the same time, that g
I keep having problems with sound on my system that i just dont know how to
describe any more. If there is a way to say whats going on, i want to know
this, so i can get help better, and figure out myself how to keep things
working. I dont want to do any thing fancy, i just want sound to *work*
cc:
Subject: Re: sound woes with kernel
2.6.0 and 865 chipset
10/03/2003
FWIW, Did you make clean before compiling the kernel? If you didn't
those errors could be a result of previously compiled code. OTOH if
you're an advanced enough user to want to compile your own kernel you
probably knew that.
HTH
-Dan
On Fri, 2003-10-03 at 11:28, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>
I'm running kernel 2.6.0-test4 on my Abit IS7 mobo (Intel 865 chipset).
I'm trying to get ALSA sound working, and I'm having a devil of a time
of it.
I have ALSA sound enabled in my kernel. Abit (and also Realtek, who
make the integrated AC650 sound chip) offers an AC'97 codec module to be
do
Hi,
I have a strange problem with esd.
If I select to start esd and to enable Gnome sounds
in the controll panel, then whenever I start X I get
some strange pulsing high frequency sound from my speakers,
that stops after X has finished loading.
And allthough strange that's not a big problem.
The p
I have an almost new Debian installation (Woody) that is giving me a
great deal of grief getting sound configured.
I actually have two soundcards in my machine to chose from. I have a
Creative CT4750 PCI sound card that had worked in this hardware
configuration under Red Hat. I also have the on-
> I have the same card, but I compiled the ES1371-driver not as module. IIRC
> you have to define aliases for the sound driver in /etc/conf.modules if you
> want to use it as module.
>
> Here, with the driver compiled directly into the kernel it works fine with no
> other configuration at all,
On Sun, Sep 05, 1999 at 05:15:37PM -0500, Kent West wrote:
> I have successfully configured sound on a couple of Debian boxes, but
> only as a result of hit&miss luck. On this box with an AudioPCI 64
> (Ensonique 1371 I believe), I haven't had any success.
>
> When I run "make menuconfig", I speci
I have successfully configured sound on a couple of Debian boxes, but
only as a result of hit&miss luck. On this box with an AudioPCI 64
(Ensonique 1371 I believe), I haven't had any success.
A LOT of the problem is that I just don't comprehend what's necessary to
get sound working. Reading the HO
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