Oh, and the volume is so low because your mixer settings are set that way. Get a mixer program (Gnome has one of its own in the multimedia package I think) and up the volume.
On Thursday 30 August 2001 07:09 pm, David Nusinow wrote: > Hi Eric, > My guess is that your soundcard isn't configured as a module, but is > instead compiled right in to the kernel, hence the lack of anything with > lsmod. I don't know exactly why your sound will play when you cat it, but > not in gnome, but the most common cause of audio problems is that you're > not part of the "audio" group. If you never added yourself to that group, > go ahead and do it, then logout and log back in as that user and see if > your apps can play sounds. > > - David Nusinow > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > On Thursday 30 August 2001 01:31 pm, Eric Whitestone wrote: > > Ok, i've gone throught the sound HOWTO. When my system boots up, it > > detects the card, and says it's at IRQ 11. But, when I do an lsmod, > > nothing is listed at all. But, when I do a "cat endoftheworld > > > /dev/dsp", that song plays (if i turn the speakers up loud). My question > > is, how can I get this to work in gnome and other applications? Thanks in > > advance! > > > > --eric