Never write emails when you just wake up. :). That's the lesson here folks. And thanks for the extra info Kevin. Eli On Thursday 25 March 2010 07:44:33 Kevin Kofler wrote: > Eli Wapniarski wrote: > > If you are unable to see the beep in kmix you will need to configure > > channels and select it. If you do not see the option, it means that the > > kde multimedia system is configured to work with phonon and not alsa. > > "Phonon and not ALSA"? Huh? I think you mean PulseAudio where you wrote > "phonon". But KMix PulseAudio integration is disabled by default in Fedora > 12! > > > I do not remember where to configure this in the kde settings. Kevin > > Koffler pointed this one out to me and is documented at > > There's only one 'f' at "Kofler"! > > > http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Features/KDE_PulseAudio_Integration > > > > At the bottom there is the section called "Release Notes" and there you > > will find the following information. Of course, you will have to logoff > > and back on to your KDE session to be able to see the change. > > But the suggested change is already the default setup on Fedora 12! That > feature page is for Fedora 13. > > The PC speaker setting in ALSA (and thus KMix) will only work if you're > having your sound card emulate the PC speaker, which is probably not how > his hardware is set up. (I think that feature is only used on some > laptops.) If: * you're using the actual PC speaker for beeps (not the > sound card) OR * you're redirecting the X11 bell to the sound card in > software using PA OR * the program isn't using beeps at all, but some > GNOME notification sound, then that setting will have no effect > whatsoever. > > Kevin Kofler > > _______________________________________________ > kde mailing list > kde at lists.fedoraproject.org > https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/kde > New to KDE4? - get help from http://userbase.kde.org -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean.