Tony Nelson writes:
On 20-01-13 19:19:24, Sam Varshavchik wrote:
Matti Pulkkinen writes:
Sam Varshavchik kirjoitti 13.1.2020 klo 5.25:
One of my laptops has a minor, but an annoying, glitch with audio playback.
I've observed this behavior with both Firefox and other audio playback
applica
On Tue, 14 Jan 2020 13:22:04 -
"Steven Usdansky" wrote:
> Each distro creates its own directory under /boot/efi/EFI, so I have
> /boot/efi/EFI/fedora, /boot/efi/EFI/manjaro. /boot/efi/EFI/ubuntu.
> And in each distro's directory, there's a set of the distro's own
> grub files, including grub.
On 1/14/20 3:09 PM, linux guy wrote:
pulseaudio -k fixes it.
excellent!
I run mine from my $HOME/bin/pa
exec /usr/bin/pavucontrol 3>&1 2>&1 >/dev/null &
All those redirects are to stop the app from crapping all over my
terminals. :/
I'll need to look into -k
_
pulseaudio -k fixes it.
On Tue, Jan 14, 2020 at 4:08 PM linux guy wrote:
> Spoke too soon. Now it is delayed and distorted !
>
> On Tue, Jan 14, 2020 at 4:07 PM linux guy wrote:
>
>> Thanks for the tip.
>> Opening pulse audio volume control didn't fix it, but going to the
>> Configuration tab
Spoke too soon. Now it is delayed and distorted !
On Tue, Jan 14, 2020 at 4:07 PM linux guy wrote:
> Thanks for the tip.
> Opening pulse audio volume control didn't fix it, but going to the
> Configuration tab and changing the output from one HDMI device to another
> and back did. Except that
Thanks for the tip.
Opening pulse audio volume control didn't fix it, but going to the
Configuration tab and changing the output from one HDMI device to another
and back did. Except that the audio is now delayed by a couple seconds.
I've thought it was an initialization error for quite some time
On 1/14/20 2:59 PM, linux guy wrote:
Thanks for the reply.
What do you mean by "Just opening pulseaudio fixed the buzz" ? A
pulseaudio application ? Pulseaudio volume control ?
I never really understood what happened. I get the feeling that the low
level initialization wasn't done compl
On 1/14/20 2:59 PM, linux guy wrote:
Thanks for the reply.
What do you mean by "Just opening pulseaudio fixed the buzz" ? A
pulseaudio application ? Pulseaudio volume control ?
pulseaudio volume control
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Thanks for the reply.
What do you mean by "Just opening pulseaudio fixed the buzz" ? A
pulseaudio application ? Pulseaudio volume control ?
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On 1/14/20 2:29 PM, linux guy wrote:
I've had issues with distorted audio played via HDMI since Sept. 2019 on
3 different computers.
You can make out speech played via HDMI, but it is really distorted.
After a time it sounds normal, ie undistorted. It used to occur the
every time when a co
Might be related to this bug?
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux-oem-osp1/+bug/1838243
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I've had issues with distorted audio played via HDMI since Sept. 2019 on 3
different computers.
You can make out speech played via HDMI, but it is really distorted. After
a time it sounds normal, ie undistorted. It used to occur the every time
when a computer was booted. Now it seems to occur
On 20-01-13 19:19:24, Sam Varshavchik wrote:
Matti Pulkkinen writes:
Sam Varshavchik kirjoitti 13.1.2020 klo 5.25:
One of my laptops has a minor, but an annoying, glitch with audio
playback. I've observed this behavior with both Firefox and other
audio playback applications. When audio play
On Tue, Jan 14, 2020 at 1:13 PM Todd Zullinger wrote:
>
<--SNIP-->
>
> I'd probably start with a Fedora bug. It looks like the
> conda tarball contains the bash_completion.d file¹, but it's
> not installed with the package. So either that should be
> fixed (or if there's a reason to not include
Matthew Miller wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 14, 2020 at 12:00:43PM -0500, Hiisi wrote:
>>> `dnf repoquery --whatprovides /etc/bash_completion.d/conda` returns no
>>> results, which means no package in the Fedora distribution provides that.
>> Thank you, Matthew. I was trying to query dnf before posting wit
On 2020-01-14 00:14, Ed Greshko wrote:
FWIW, it is too bad the OP did rm on ./.config/vlc. It would have been
interesting to see what would have
happened if that directory was just moved and then moved back to see if it had
something to do with
the issue.
Nothing got better until I did the d
On 2020-01-13 23:07, Samuel Sieb wrote:
I'm curious about what is in the vlc.001 directory.
I already erased it. It was plugins and things.
Presumable, all outdated
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On Tue, Jan 14, 2020 at 12:00:43PM -0500, Hiisi wrote:
> > `dnf repoquery --whatprovides /etc/bash_completion.d/conda` returns no
> > results, which means no package in the Fedora distribution provides that.
> Thank you, Matthew. I was trying to query dnf before posting with the
> same results. Sha
On Tue, Jan 14, 2020 at 11:56 AM Matthew Miller
wrote:
>
> On Tue, Jan 14, 2020 at 10:22:12AM -0500, Hiisi wrote:
> > Hello, list!
> > After running `conda init` each time I open a new terminal window I have
> > this message at the very first line:
> > bash: /etc/bash_completion.d/conda: No such f
On Tue, Jan 14, 2020 at 10:22:12AM -0500, Hiisi wrote:
> Hello, list!
> After running `conda init` each time I open a new terminal window I have
> this message at the very first line:
> bash: /etc/bash_completion.d/conda: No such file or directory
> (base) [hiisi@localhost ~] $
> Indeed, there's no
Hello, list!
After running `conda init` each time I open a new terminal window I have
this message at the very first line:
bash: /etc/bash_completion.d/conda: No such file or directory
(base) [hiisi@localhost ~] $
Indeed, there's no such file. Which package provides that?
Thanks.
--
Hiisi.
Registe
Each distro creates its own directory under /boot/efi/EFI, so I have
/boot/efi/EFI/fedora, /boot/efi/EFI/manjaro. /boot/efi/EFI/ubuntu.
And in each distro's directory, there's a set of the distro's own grub files,
including grub.cfg, that will bring up a normal grub menu let me boot any of my
in
On 2020-01-14 16:04, Samuel Sieb wrote:
> On 1/13/20 11:27 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>> On 2020-01-14 15:24, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>> Since I didn't do anything to enable "autoremove" I suppose you're saying
>>> it is enabled by default?
>>> How to check?
>>
>> Oh, never mind.
>>
>> I think you're using
On 1/13/20 11:27 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 2020-01-14 15:24, Ed Greshko wrote:
Since I didn't do anything to enable "autoremove" I suppose you're saying it is
enabled by default?
How to check?
Oh, never mind.
I think you're using the wrong terminology.
dnf.conf contains, by default
clean_re
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