On Wed, Jan 06, 2010 at 12:30:53AM +0100, Lennart Poettering wrote:
On Tue, 05.01.10 18:41, Tomasz Torcz (to...@pipebreaker.pl) wrote:
On Mon, Apr 27, 2009 at 02:29:24PM +0200, Tomasz Torcz wrote:
On Mon, Apr 27, 2009 at 01:04:37PM +0200, CJ van den Berg wrote:
Now, in step 3 I clearly
On Wed, 06.01.10 09:01, Tomasz Torcz (to...@pipebreaker.pl) wrote:
I don't see what saving/restoring has to do with restoring. For me,
it is about temporary raising global volume without rescaling samples
already in buffer. So, when I have Totem playing at -10dB and it fills
the buffer.
'Twas brillig, and Lennart Poettering at 06/01/10 13:18 did gyre and gimble:
I stumble into it almost every day — I have event sound enabled
and set significantly louder than music and movie streams volume.
Everytime I click a button having something played in background,
I get temporary
On Wed, Jan 6, 2010 at 8:31 AM, Colin Guthrie wrote:
I still see this too, but not for the full duration of the louder sound,
just at the fringes - e.g. when it starts and when it ends.
We discussed the problem a while back Lennart and you reckoned it was
something that wasn't going to be
On Mon, Apr 27, 2009 at 02:29:24PM +0200, Tomasz Torcz wrote:
On Mon, Apr 27, 2009 at 01:04:37PM +0200, CJ van den Berg wrote:
Now, in step 3 I clearly set the *sink* volume manually to 65%. Which
pulse apparently ignored when the totem stream started. I don’t see how
this fits into your
On Tue, 05.01.10 18:41, Tomasz Torcz (to...@pipebreaker.pl) wrote:
On Mon, Apr 27, 2009 at 02:29:24PM +0200, Tomasz Torcz wrote:
On Mon, Apr 27, 2009 at 01:04:37PM +0200, CJ van den Berg wrote:
Now, in step 3 I clearly set the *sink* volume manually to 65%. Which
pulse apparently ignored
On Wed, Apr 29, 2009 at 02:15:24PM +0200, Michał Sawicz wrote:
Dnia 2009-04-29, śro o godzinie 11:57 +0200, CJ van den Berg pisze:
Also, overkill IMHO. I would just drop the stream level to compensate
when the measured 'loudness' crosses a user set threshold.
Yes, compression.
It’s only
On Tue, 28.04.09 14:43, pl bossart (bossart.nos...@gmail.com) wrote:
Lennart,
heya,
I wasn't really addressing the difference between sink and stream
volume. Your answer on which volumes are saved when was extremely
interesting and educational, but my concern was: 'how do I prevent the
On Mon, 27.04.09 13:04, CJ van den Berg (c...@vdbonline.com) wrote:
On Sat, Apr 25, 2009 at 02:53:30AM +0200, Lennart Poettering wrote:
What this boils down to is:
If you change the volume of a stream, you just change the volume of
that one stream for now and for the future. It
On Mon, 27.04.09 15:11, CJ van den Berg (c...@vdbonline.com) wrote:
On Mon, Apr 27, 2009 at 02:29:43PM +0200, Lennart Poettering wrote:
5. Start totem. Sink volume jumps to 85% (and blows my eardrums).
Totem’s stream volume is also 85%.
Last time you apparently configured the totem
On Mon, 27.04.09 15:56, CJ van den Berg (c...@vdbonline.com) wrote:
If the user tries to set the relative volume such that the hardware
can’t actually do it, then it’s just tough cheese. If a stream is
playing at sink+20% and the user raises the sink to 100%, then the stream
must not
Dnia 2009-04-27, pon o godzinie 17:36 +0200, Lennart Poettering pisze:
And then there
are some laptops with internal speakers where this might actually
apply, too.
I mean, it doesn't just depend on the hardware, it also depends on the
media you play.
Exactly, I myself recently made my
On Fri, 24.04.09 17:14, pl bossart (bossart.nos...@gmail.com) wrote:
Hi,
I have been playing with flat volumes in 0.9.15. Nice functionality.
But it seems nothing prevents an application from setting the volume
to the max any longer. Is there a way to specify that the master
volume should
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