Am Montag 19 September 2011, 21:20:30 schrieb Alan McKinnon:
> On Mon, 19 Sep 2011 14:02:39 -0400
> 
> Michael Mol <mike...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > On Mon, Sep 19, 2011 at 1:42 PM, Volker Armin Hemmann
> > 
> > <volkerar...@googlemail.com> wrote:
> > > Am Montag 19 September 2011, 12:37:16 schrieb Michael Mol:
> > >> I recall reading about dmix in LinuxJournal years ago, but I don't
> > >> think I ever got around to setting it up;
> > > 
> > > you don't set it up. It just works. If your sound card does not do
> > > hardware mixing (onboard sound doesn't) you are using dmix.
> > 
> > Ah. As I said, I hadn't poked or researched dmix since I read about it
> > in LinuxJournal. Pretty sure that particular issue came out over ten
> > years ago.
> > 
> > That doesn't quite jive with my experience with apps some apps
> > managing to take exclusive control over sound devices. In particular,
> > if, e.g. Flash were run under Firefox before WINE or PulseAudio, then
> > the latter two didn't get to play.*
> 
> Flash isn't a good example though. It just assumes that it is the most
> important (only?) thing in the universe, and tries to take over the
> hardware for itself. If I read recent blogs correctly, even Windows
> users suffer from the same thing with Flash.
> 
> I think the presumption in this thread in that sound apps make *some*
> attempt to play nicely - Flash doesn't fit that category. The only
> category it fits is "useless crap that should either be deleted or only
> used when absolutely necessary"

I am sure that I am able to listen to sound from flash and vlc at the same 
time.

I am using a sound card with hardware mixing tho.
-- 
#163933

Reply via email to