It appears to me that flashplayer 10 is causing pulseaudio to startup.
Why would that happen?
--
Russell O'Connor http://r6.ca/
``All talk about `theft,''' the general counsel of the American Graphophone
Company wrote, ``is the merest claptrap, for there
On Wed, 7 Sep 2011, rocon...@theorem.ca wrote:
It appears to me that flashplayer 10 is causing pulseaudio to startup. Why
would that happen?
Turns out deleteing my ~/.asoundrc file was the key to fixing my woes.
--
Russell O'Connor http://r6.ca/
``All
Hi,
On 09/02/2011 01:57 AM, rocon...@theorem.ca wrote:
Is there some way to disable pulseaudio in kde-4.5.5?
Just set hardware.pulseaudio.enable = false; in configuration.nix
(which happens to be the default). This should cause
/etc/pulse/client.conf to contain the line autospawn=no,
Hi,
On Fri, Sep 2, 2011 at 08:44, Eelco Dolstra e.dols...@tudelft.nl wrote:
On 09/02/2011 01:57 AM, rocon...@theorem.ca wrote:
Is there some way to disable pulseaudio in kde-4.5.5?
Just set hardware.pulseaudio.enable = false; in configuration.nix (which
happens to be the default).
To know
# nixos-option hardware.pulseaudio.enable
false
I was under the impression that hardware.pulseaudio.enable was for
enabling root managed pulseaudio (which I understand that pulseaudio does
*not* recommend).
As I understand this nasty instance of pulseaudio is coming from kde
somewhere.
Hi,
If you want to know which packages depends on inside your NixOS
current system, run:
nix-store -q -R --tree /var/run/current-system/ | less
then look at all parents of pulseaudio. On my system qt depends on pulseaudio.
On Fri, Sep 2, 2011 at 16:13, rocon...@theorem.ca wrote:
#
Hi,
On 09/02/2011 04:13 PM, rocon...@theorem.ca wrote:
# nixos-option hardware.pulseaudio.enable
false
I was under the impression that hardware.pulseaudio.enable was for enabling root
managed pulseaudio (which I understand that pulseaudio does *not* recommend).
That's another option