On Mon, Mar 03, 2025 at 05:13:35PM -0800, Paul Goyette wrote:
> But I've always been confused with what appears to be a plethora of
> moving parts to make sound work. It doesn't seem to be as easy as
> just-plug-in-the-speakers!
On machines with just one audio interface (and a well working driver
On 3/3/2025 18:34, Ted Spradley wrote:
Just give it a try. Good luck.
I also agree.
I run NetBSD 10 on a Pine64 RockPro64 (among other devices) with a USB
speaker and it has been solid. That device I specifically stream audio.
-Joel
On Mon, 3 Mar 2025 17:13:35 -0800 (PST)
Paul Goyette wrote:
> a plethora of
> moving parts to make sound work.
audio(4) is a good place to start, it will point you toward the other
man pages and devices you need to be aware of, but it's not as
complicated as it looks. The only thing that caused
The mpg123 package might be useful to you. I’ve used it to play mp3 files
solely thru the terminal.
>
> On Mar 3, 2025, at 8:13 PM, Paul Goyette wrote:
>
> I've never bothered to use NetBSD to play music, but I'd like to get
> the windoze laptop off my desk!
>
> But I've always been confuse
I've never bothered to use NetBSD to play music, but I'd like to get
the windoze laptop off my desk!
But I've always been confused with what appears to be a plethora of
moving parts to make sound work. It doesn't seem to be as easy as
just-plug-in-the-speakers! Vague memories seem to hint at th