On Fri, Feb 6, 2009 at 7:40 PM, lesl...@ozemail.com.au
wrote:
> I'm using Fedora 9.
>
> Yesterday, I installed a no-name PCI sound card. It had a place to plug in a
> cable from my DVD player. I plugged that in. A chip on the card said Ensoniq
> 1371.
>
> I ran aplay -l. I was told I had no soundc
I vaguely remember there was a problem with snd-ens1371, and the problem was
introduced by kernel and/or ALSA developers, and then there was an attempt to
apply a patch that would reenable OSS support for the card.
It wasn't me who had the problem, that's why I onlu vaguely remember all this.
My
Leslie Katz wrote:
> Thanks for your further reply, stan.
>
> I understand what you say. I'll first try a different slot and, if that
> doesn't work, then a different card.
>
> I don't know my Asimov, but I do know my Sherlock Holmes: "How often
> have I said to you that when you have eliminate
Thanks for your further reply, stan.
I understand what you say. I'll first try a different slot and, if that
doesn't work, then a different card.
I don't know my Asimov, but I do know my Sherlock Holmes: "How often
have I said to you that when you have eliminated the impossible,
whatever remai
Leslie Katz wrote:
> Thanks very much for replying so promptly, stan.
>
>
> !!Loaded ALSA modules
> !!---
>
>
>
> !!Sound Servers on this system
> !!
>
> Pulseaudio:
> Installed - Yes (/usr/bin/pulseaudio)
> Running - No
>
> ESound Daemon
lesl...@ozemail.com.au wrote:
> I'm using Fedora 9.
>
> Yesterday, I installed a no-name PCI sound card. It had a place to plug
> in a cable from my DVD player. I plugged that in. A chip on the card
> said Ensoniq 1371.
>
> I ran aplay -l. I was told I had no soundcards.
>
> I ran lspci -v. I