Hi Jason,
On So, Dez 16, 2012 at 04:49:55 +1100, Jason White wrote:
> Do you still need it if you're running PulseAudio 2.1-2 from experimental?
Yes I see no difference.
I've tested in in my wheezy vm.
Regards
Halim
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Hello,
On So, Dez 16, 2012 at 04:41:46 +1100, Daniel Dalton wrote:
> Are you just using speechd-up with speakup, so that it can use
> speech-dispatcher? Or should espeakup actually work as well?
I use sbl at the textconsole.
Espeakup should work as well if it uses alsa in espeak (not sure). I am
Hi,
On So, Dez 16, 2012 at 04:49:55 +1100, Jason White wrote:
> I'm trying to work out why PulseAudio is not blocking the audio device on my
> laptop, even though I haven't changed the configuration from its defaults.
Maybe your audio hardware can mix several audiostreams in hardware?
Or they have
Halim Sahin wrote:
> - place the attached default.pa in ~/.pulse
> The changes are that pulseaudio can't block the audio device.
Thanks for this.
Do you still need it if you're running PulseAudio 2.1-2 from experimental?
I'm trying to work out why PulseAudio is not blocking the audio device on
On Fri, Dec 14, 2012 at 09:23:52PM +0100, Halim Sahin wrote:
> Hi,
> Unfortunately next stable debian' graphical desktop
> will highly depend on pulseaudio.
> aptitude show gnome-core
Certainly
>
> So here are some hints how to deal with this situation:
> - place the attached default.pa i
---
jude
Adobe fiend for failing to Flash
-- Forwarded message --
Date: Fri, 14 Dec 2012 15:23:52
From: Halim Sahin
To: debian-accessibility@lists.debian.org
Subject: hints for pulseaudio in wheezy
Hi,
Unfortunately next stable debian' graphical desktop
will highly depend on pulseaudio.
aptitude show gnome-core
So here are some hints how to deal with this situation:
- place the attached default.pa in ~/.pulse
The changes are that pulseaudio can't block the audio device.
- sudo rm /usr/
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