I have certainly never heard of a audio card that fed 100% of its output to its input. It reallly makes me suspect a configuratin problem, b ut have no idea what. Sorry. On Sun, 29 Aug 2010, Warren Dumortier wrote: > Thanks for asnwering. > First of all it's true that some part of the output may get into the input > with such audio chips, but now the problem is that it's too much. > On Windows this is also the case, but it's not a problem as you almost do > not hear it, however on Linux there's more like a 100% output that goes to > input. > So it can only be a software problem even if the hardware isn't the best, if > it works very well on Windows and not on Linux, i suppose the problem comes > from the drivers. > > And i don't want to buy an audio card as my chip works very well on Windows, > i would simply like to have it running very well on Linux too... ;) > -- William G. Unruh | Canadian Institute for| Tel: +1(604)822-3273 Physics&Astronomy | Advanced Research | Fax: +1(604)822-5324 UBC, Vancouver,BC | Program in Cosmology | unruh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx Canada V6T 1Z1 | and Gravity | www.theory.physics.ubc.ca/ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Sell apps to millions through the Intel(R) Atom(Tm) Developer Program Be part of this innovative community and reach millions of netbook users worldwide. Take advantage of special opportunities to increase revenue and speed time-to-market. Join now, and jumpstart your future. http://p.sf.net/sfu/intel-atom-d2d _______________________________________________ Alsa-user mailing list Alsa-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/alsa-user