What is at /var/log/dmesg?
Try grep 'sound' -f /var/log/dmesg
On Fri, Jul 8, 2011 at 10:29 AM, g wrote:
> On 07/08/2011 02:42 PM, Howard wrote:
> > Yes, alsamixer shows a lot.
> >
> > I also found that I have lshal which shows everything identified:
> > lshal | less # is nice to look through
On 07/08/2011 02:42 PM, Howard wrote:
> Yes, alsamixer shows a lot.
>
> I also found that I have lshal which shows everything identified:
> lshal | less # is nice to look through
it is an extensive database. "man hald"
btw, after other post, out of curious, i tried "locate bin/ls" to find
that
Yes, alsamixer shows a lot.
I also found that I have lshal which shows everything identified:
lshal | less # is nice to look through
They both show the NVIDA card.
So I guess in todays world an advanced graphics card would have advanced
sound capabilities for better management of both sound
It should be detected automatically, if enabled in the BIOS,
Try:
# alsamixer
if not installed, do
yum -y install alsa-utils
Albert.
On 07/07/2011 01:33 PM, Howard wrote:
>Hi, I am running Fedora 13.
> I was given a computer and do not know what sound card is installed.
> What is the be
On 07/07/2011 12:33 PM, Howard wrote:
> Hi, I am running Fedora 13.
> I was given a computer and do not know what sound card is installed.
> What is the best way to go about finding out what it is?
to see what your hardware is, from a terminal cli, issue commands;
man lsusb
man lspci
Hi, I am running Fedora 13.
I was given a computer and do not know what sound card is installed.
What is the best way to go about finding out what it is?
/etc/udev/rules.d/90-alsa-tools-firmware.rules shows these 3 entries:
# TASCAM US-428 usb sound card.
# TASCAM US-224 usb sound card.
# TAS