On Monday 07 January 2008, Rahul Sundaram wrote: >Craig White wrote: >> On Mon, 2008-01-07 at 11:33 -0600, Rex Dieter wrote: >>> Gene Heskett wrote: >>>> On Monday 07 January 2008, Kevin Kofler wrote: >>>>> Gene Heskett <gene.heskett <at> verizon.net> writes: >>>>>> Add me to the list of folks who had to nuke as much of pulseaudio as I >>>>>> could without ripping out 2/3rds of kde. >>>>> >>>>> Huh? What was it trying to remove and why (i.e. what PA stuff did it >>>>> depend on)? Normally the only KDE package you have to remove when >>>>> removing PA is kde-settings-pulseaudio (duh...). >>>>> >>>>> Kevin Kofler >>>> >>>> I finally got working audio back, seems there is an alsa-pulse package, >>>> that because the list is sorted alphabetical, wasn't noted at first. >>>> >>>> Ferinstance, dependency hell.. Just trying to remove akode-pulseaudio >>>> gets all this: >>>> >>>> Humm, can't seem to make kmail insert a .png, and I'm not gonna hand >>>> copy that list, its akode, kdeaddons-extras, and all 8 pieces of >>>> kde-muiltmedia that >>>> will go out with it. That's BS. >>> >>> akode-pulseaudio is harmless, chill. :) >> >> ---- >> Rex, for those of us on F8 & KDE, wanting to use pulseaudio >> >> do we still need to load pulseaudio.sh per... >> >> http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/RexDieter/PulseAudioKDE? >> >> or does simply installing the packages handle all of that for me? I >> can't really tell. > >Installing does everything needed. That wiki page was used to brain >storm a solution. > >Rahul In which case it seems like it should Just Work(TM), but doesn't. One clue might be is that the pulseaudio volume control doesn't see all installed audio devices, and apparently hijacks whatever is fed to my Audigy 2 and redirects it to the nforce ac97 stuff on the mobo, which I have setup, or did have, for use with one of the internet telephones, and there is a headset plugged into that. But that's a minor detail if skype-twinkle-etc doesn't work ATM, I have much more pressing problems cuz init isn't running /etc/rc.d/rc3.d/S99local at bootup for some unk reason, so I have to run it by hand after login to start all the background stuff I run here. I will try selinux=0 on the kernel argument line on the next reboot and see if that fixes it. Back to PA. Is there a place, a conf file that controls this? Or is it just terminally dumb and deserves to be put down? -- Cheers, Gene "There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order." -Ed Howdershelt (Author) I am here by the will of the people and I won't leave until I get my raincoat back. - a slogan of the anarchists in Richard Kadrey's "Metrophage" -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list