Most computers have audio recording and playback devices such as sound cards, microphones, headphones, and speakers (built-in or external). Use Control Panel's Sound program to configure these devices.

Figure 4.36 Select the check boxes of any audio devices whose volume you want to adjust even when they're not playing sound. You can make sure, for example, that your speaker volume isn't explosively loud when you switch over from headphones.


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I messed up the audio on my 10.10 installation. I had a problem of having no sound when plugging in the headphones and following many different solutions for that problem I (de)installed several packages. Now I have no sound at all.

I don't want a solution on how to fix my headphone problem. I just want to reset all audio-related setting and packages to the after-installation state (where at least the speakers were working).

I found several places where it is said that there is no global reset-to-after-installation possibility. Or that on could use apt-get clean, but even if this would remove all non-standard audio-packages, I don't know which packages I would have to install in order to get the standard audio-packages.

It may well be that in your case only a minor component of the sound system (mainly ALSA and pulseaudio) is missing that could be reinstalled or reconfigured easily. To tell this you should exactly know what you have done, what you have removed and what you may have installed as a replacement. From what you write in your question this unfortunately seems not to be the case.

If you only changed settings and configuration files but did not remove packages there may indeed be a good chance to recover your system. You can easily find out if your sound problems come from a wrong user setting or from system wide settings by looking at sound in the guest account or by creating a new user account. In case this new user has sound you will find all default settings in the new user's /home. In some cases wrong pulseaudio settings in a user's home can be removed by renaming/deleting ~/.config/pulse (~/.pulse in older releases).

I'm here because I assumed the entire machine would use the same audio settings in /etc/pulse. That always worked in the past. I never imagined ~/.config/pulse would generate itself without my knowledge, with busted settings that sound horrible. Seems like a bug.

In my opinion, just try loging in as root user and open any audio/video file. Check your headset now. If it works, just login into a normal account again. The problem might have been fixed. It worked for me twice. Sometimes my headset port has these difficulties. Try this.

I am not a software developer or IT specialist. But with my rudimentary knowledge I'll try to find out how it works.

In my opinion, the following lines from "/usr/bin/ubuntustudio-audio-config" are relevant for switching from pipewire-jack to native jack.

Normally, I use a laptop as a primary monitor with 2 monitors either side. One through HDMI, one through mini-DP. This gives audio output through the HDMI port, or the onboard card (the miniDP is not supported.) As I am away, I am using a laptop only.

Pipewire and Wireplumber work well for most, and if it worked for you with the external monitors but not for the laptop speaker then it was simply a config issue in needing to select the proper sink for audio output.

The way to enable or disable pulseaudio and pipewire-pulseaudio is normally to swap the packages with dnf. sudo dnf swap pipewire-pulseaudio pulseaudio --allowerasing to remove pipewire-pulseaudio and install pulseaudio. Simply reverse the package names to reinstall pipewire-pulseaudio.

Looking at the audio devices config dialog, it seems that the only way I can specify the VBAudio cables is if I use Port Audio. In fact, now that I have selected it and chosen the VBAudio cables I cannot unselect Port Audio. Is that (part of) the problem?

With these settings I lost the waterfall in fldigi, so no audio is getting from wfview to fldigi. Audio is also not getting from fldigi to wfview as the TX audio meter in wfview reads zero when I send a short message in PSK31.

As we have said (numerous times) wfview does not handle audio for USB connected rigs, so there is NO configuration in wfview that can work like you want it to! If you cannot use the wfview client/server, simply bypass wfview and connect the USB audio codec from the IC7300 directly to fldigi or whatever software you are using.

We have a WL1835 module attached to a AM3352 running a Yocto build. We have the bluetooth HCI interface operating and I'm wanting to get the audio interface operating but I have no idea where to start.

We are trying to use A2DP on bluez on a Yocto build (3.14 Kernel). The graphics in your link indicate that the audio samples are routed over the HCI link where I had assummed that they had to be routed over the PCM interface.

I typically set my mic level to 65, and use the knobs on my audio interface to control the level if needed, but I never have to.. until I updated. Ever since then, about a month now, my friends will tell me my voice is clipping/too loud.. I go check my mic level and it's at 95-100... I set it back down to 65 and it's good for the rest of the session.. never changes.. then the maybe a day or two later, it happens again.

Looking over Task Manager, and MSCONFIG, I saw something called Corsair Gaming Audio Configuration Service running on my system.. I do have Corsair fans, Corsair keyboard, and lighting node pro, but I do not have any Corsair audio devices.. could this be the culprit though? 

 

I disabled it in MSCONFIG and it no longer runs on system startup. My mic levels also have not changed since disabling it... so I want to say this is the problem.. but why is it doing this and why does it have so much control especially if I have no Corsair audio devices?

My sound system is somehow not working properly. Only one playback at a time is working. Either flash player, a media player, a game. But never both at the same time. I want to use Cinnamon + Pulse Audio. I don't know what I need to install to get it working (pulseaudio, also, oss, ....) I assume the problem is that I installed several sound systems at the same time.

Could you be so nice and help me to determine and fix the problem? I have no clue where to start. I read the appropriate Wiki articles but I'm not sure what exactly I need to do. All I want is a working and autostarting/respawning pulse audio ...

Install pulseaudio-alsa if some of the programs you're using are still using alsa (flashplugin being a notable example). But yeah first you gotta find out if pulse is even running or what is even there on your system, try to answer some of ondoho's questions

cmus would "mute" whenever any other application would begin playing audio. setting flat-volumes = no in /etc/pulse/daemon.conf fixed this behavior for me. There is a mention of this option in the wiki.

It is supposed to persist, since we want to know more about it. Fuser only shows what is using the specified file/socket/filesystem.

Please run fuser when playing a sound and (trying to run) multiple sound at once. Pulseaudio is probably set to suspend sink/source when idle, something else (flash or media player) might grab communication to hardware and block the rest.

That would only confirm my assumption that module-suspend-on-idle is loaded. Disable it and see if it helps. If you do not know how, read the wiki. That way pulseaudio should be active all the time (might be problematic over very long periods, but should solve your problem).

I set all the extensions to UDP only, disabled SRTP and turned off TLS in the SIP settings. I guess time will tell at this point if that resolved the issue. All of the phones downloaded their new configurations from EndPoint Manager and registered with the new settings. The internal phones to have the LAN IP as the primary SIP server and the one external phone I have is using the external DNS name as they should.

Are you receiving frequent "Audio configuration error" warnings and you have to reconfigure your audio devices in Voicemod*?


*NOTE: Voicemod (its voices and sounds) will remain unusable until you reconfigure your audio devices. Even if the disconnected device(s) appears selected, click on the device(s) to re-establish the connection. If the disconnected device(s) do not appear, you will have to reconnect them physically or choose other devices. If the connection to the device(s) is still not established, try using the audio assistant.

+ The audio flows from the microphone to Voicemod and from there we create two output signals; one goes straight to the headphones and the other goes through the Voicemod Virtual Audio Device to our Voicemod Virtual Microphone. If you have different sample rates in the devices where the audio is flowing, we have to resample each audio package, which means, a lot of processes.

So I installed Debian Jessie, with the Cinnamon desktop, and my home partition was completely empty so that the configuration is now mostly the defaults. There is something with my system which I am finding extremely irritating. That is, my sound settings keep changing.

It's a fact that pulseaudio is not so stable nowadays in all situations. Use pavucontrol and pasystray for controlling volume settings continuously, or you can remove pulseaudio completely and using pure alsa, but it may do other annoying things. Try to add jessie-backports repository and upgrade pulseaudio to 7.0.

The truth of the matter is that the point of these high-end sound formats is to do exactly what you are complaining about - give increased dynamic range. You are headed down the right path in fiddling with some of your audio processing options. 589ccfa754

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