IMO, given the facts that

- a huge part of wine's users intend to run windows applications
comprising audio output with it (particularly games)

and

- PA-focused distros like Ubuntu and its derivates have an enormous
market share, attracting an increasing number of users to the linux
world,

supporting PA should definitely not be considered a matter of personal
preferences or taste (Thereby I do not assume or imply that anybody does
so).

Granted, PA is not the best sound server out there and the trouble it
brings probably even outruns the benefits. Nevertheless it is being
incorporated into a wide spectrum of distros, i.e. employed by a vast
user base... and AFAIK there are no indications that this might change
in the near future. So this is not just a temporary fashion but rather a
part of the contemporary reality of wine use cases.

If I understand wine's goals correctly, they incude striving for the
best possible out-of-the-box experience for most of its users. Given
that this is the case, this goal is endangered by not adding PA support
at least in the long term. Though, once more, I do not imply anyone
blocking efforts in this context -- this is purely hypothetical.

So, as long as it does not break anything else, adding a *clean* and
*structured* implementation of a PA driver to wine does no harm -- will
it? However and doublessly, established wine development paradigms MUST
be maintained in doing so. Anything else would be fatal in the context
of such a huge project, in which the methods and practices of the
leading devs have indeed turned out to be very successful.


But this is just my personal opinion... I hope it's helpful to anybody, 
providing food for thought.

At least I'm quite sure about this: There are many users out there
thinking something like "my audio is not working properly when running
my windows apps with wine -> linux is crap"... They'd be glad if you
guys could somehow reconcile. :)

Or, to put it a little more direct and to pick up what Maurizio said
above, stubbornness -- on any side -- has never gotten anyone anywhere.
Especially not among apparently able developers.

-- 
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Desktop
Packages, which is subscribed to pulseaudio in Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/371897

Title:
  Occasional sound drops in Wine via PulseAudio

Status in Wine:
  Confirmed
Status in “pulseaudio” package in Ubuntu:
  Confirmed
Status in “wine” package in Ubuntu:
  Triaged

Bug description:
  Binary package hint: wine

  I'm running the Spotify Windows application on two laptops under Wine
  with both internal and external USB sound card. With both cards you
  get the occasional pop and click in the sound suggesting some data
  loss somewhere.

  I've selected the alsa drivers in winecfg and the whole thing is
  running via the alsa compatibility layer in pulseaudio.

  Jaunty 9.04 UNR and standard Ubuntu desktop.

  wine:
    Installed: 1.0.1-0ubuntu6
    Candidate: 1.0.1-0ubuntu6
    Version table:
   *** 1.0.1-0ubuntu6 0
          500 http://gb.archive.ubuntu.com jaunty/universe Packages
          100 /var/lib/dpkg/status

  pulseaudio:
    Installed: 1:0.9.14-0ubuntu20
    Candidate: 1:0.9.14-0ubuntu20
    Version table:
   *** 1:0.9.14-0ubuntu20 0
          500 http://gb.archive.ubuntu.com jaunty/main Packages
          100 /var/lib/dpkg/status

To manage notifications about this bug go to:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/wine/+bug/371897/+subscriptions

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