At Sun, 4 Sep 2011 16:15:57 +0300, Touko Korpela wrote: > > On Thu, Sep 01, 2011 at 11:18:39AM +0200, David Henningsson wrote: > > On 09/01/2011 12:08 AM, Touko Korpela wrote: > > >On Wed, Aug 31, 2011 at 10:42:02PM +0200, Clemens Ladisch wrote: > > >>Touko Korpela wrote: > > >>>>No sound is heard (but mixer is not muted). > > >>>>Shouldn't mixer have more channels to adjust? > > >>> > > >>>00:01.1 Audio device: ATI Technologies Inc Device 1314 > > >>>00:14.2 Audio device: ATI Technologies Inc SBx00 Azalia (Intel HDA) (rev > > >>>40) > > >> > > >>Your default sound device is the device that happened to be detected > > >>first, which is your GPU's HDMI output. > > >> > > >>Tell whatever sound configuration tool is used in your distribution to > > >>use the other sound device. > > > > > >Shouldn't that be hidden when HDMI cable is not plugged (like now)? > > > > I'm working on hiding exactly that at the UI level (gnome/pulseaudio > > level rather than ALSA), but that is a long-term goal and not all > > pieces are into place yet. > > > > >Does this kind of system work for someone? > > > > A very similar machine, Asus 1215P [1], was enabled by the team I'm > > involved with, so yes, it definitely works for someone, and it would > > surprise me if it does not work out of the box from an Ubuntu 11.10 > > Beta Live-CD even though the link says "pre-install only". > > > > You could try this terminal command: > > > > speaker-test -D plughw:SB -c 2 -t sine > > > > And see if that outputs sound (try both headphones and internal speakers). > > I tested that command and it works. Now just have to figure out the right > way to select default sound output device (on Debian). Ideally it should > work automatically.
Try to put the following in ~/.asoundrc: defaults.pcm.card 1 defaults.ctl.card 1 Takashi -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/s5hmxea8c24.wl%ti...@suse.de