On Thu, Mar 02, 2017 at 09:57:23PM +0100, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> Let us know, I'm curious :-)
Me too, this is remarkable.
--
Jonathan Dowland
Please do not CC me, I am subscribed to the list.
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On Thu, Mar 02, 2017 at 09:54:10PM +0100, Dominik George wrote:
> Hi Tomás,
>
> > Another possibility (apart from those mentioned in the thread) would
> > be that it passes through a different set of udev rules depending on
> > the USB port?
> >
> >
Hi Tomás,
> Another possibility (apart from those mentioned in the thread) would
> be that it passes through a different set of udev rules depending on
> the USB port?
>
> You might watch udev doing its thing with udevadm (not much recent
> experience here, sorry).
ok, I might try that.
Right n
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On Thu, Mar 02, 2017 at 06:39:13PM +0100, Dominik George wrote:
> Hi Ric,
>
> > You might check your user manual to see if one side is USB 2.0 and the
> > other USB 3.0. That might make a difference. Ric
>
> that's indeed the case.
>
> Now, why does
Le duodi 12 ventôse, an CCXXV, Dominik George a écrit :
> Taking a closer look, I found that the drive was unexpectedly provided
> as a USB mass storage device as /dev/sdc, with a partition containing a
> FAT filesystem and RIFF audio / WAV files.
>
> Now, I am using a USB CD-ROM drive, and eventu
Hi Ric,
> You might check your user manual to see if one side is USB 2.0 and the
> other USB 3.0. That might make a difference. Ric
that's indeed the case.
Now, why does the USB 2.0 port lead to that WAV file thing, while the
USB 3.0 port does CDDA?
-nik
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On 03/02/2017 11:30 AM, Dominik George wrote:
Hi,
I just tried to tip an audio CD, like I did hundreds of times before. I
tried to run ripit, and it complained that there was no audio CD
inserted.
Taking a closer look, I found that the drive was unexpectedly provided
as a USB mass storage devic
* Rory O'Connor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [011108 08:16]:
> I can play the CD with xmms and gtcd...just no sound. mp3s play on xmms
> just fine. i'm totally stumped. anyone had this problem?
I often have this problem on my laptop. I'd like to know the reason,
maybe it's the same as in your case.
I
On Thu, Nov 08, 2001 at 01:14:44AM -0600, Rory O'Connor wrote:
> I've eliminated the possibility that this is a hardware problem. I
> switched out the CD-ROM and the audio cable from a computer I know they
> worked fine on. The light is flashing when the CD is playing, and I can
> hear sound t
I've eliminated the possibility that this is a hardware problem. I
switched out the CD-ROM and the audio cable from a computer I know they
worked fine on. The light is flashing when the CD is playing, and I can
hear sound thru headphones.
I can play the CD with xmms and gtcd...just no sound.
When you play a CD, can you confirm that the activity light on the front
of the drive is lit or flashing?
Can you hear them if you plug headphones into the jack on the front of
the drive? After adjusting the volume dial on it?
Check your mixer settings (with a program such as gmix for gnome
environ
At 07:10 PM 11/7/01 -0600, Rory O'Connor wrote:
>I got the soundcard working, I can see the audio files on the audio CD
>(titles even loaded from cddb), and I can even play them. I just can't
>HEAR them. Is there some trick to being able to hear audio from the CD?
> I checked and the CD player
On Mon, May 28, 2001 at 03:02:03PM -0400, Rob Mahurin wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Under kernel 2.2.16 I can play CD audio normally; however, under
> 2.2.19 I get
>
> 14:58 tty1 $ cdir
> unknown cd - 64:30 in 6 tracks
> 10:11.62 1
> 15:17.00 2
> 9:59.08 3
> 8:19.55 4
> 3:39.12 5
> 17:01.40
Yep, that's exactely what I've done - both /dev/cdrom and /dev/hdc* are chown
root.cdrom
Then make sure that you are adduser cdrom, and everything works as
it should!
Matthew
On Tue, 26 Dec 2000 10:31:27 -0500, Scott Patterson said:
>
>
>
> >I had done that, but overlooked one small fact
>I had done that, but overlooked one small fact; I was in the cdrom group,
>but not the disk group, to which /dev/hdc was pointed. I had no rights to
>physically scan the CD for tracks!
>
>How has everyone else set up the permissions for their IDE /dev/cdrom links?
>I don't like being in the di
I had done that, but overlooked one small fact; I was in the cdrom group,
but not the disk group, to which /dev/hdc was pointed. I had no rights to
physically scan the CD for tracks!
How has everyone else set up the permissions for their IDE /dev/cdrom links?
I don't like being in the disk group
Hey,
I had to open up the xmms properties, and then enable the CD plug-in. It
will
probably ask you what device name it is, etc. But after that, it worked
fine for
me.
Cameron Matheson
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