Craig White wrote:
I do detect a pattern though...it's the same one that had you giving up
on NFS and using samba for filesharing because you couldn't make NFS
work.
I would like to state for the record that like Rex, I have many, many
systems running with pulseaudio and no problems.
I respectfully do not like this attitude. I have been a systems
administrator for 12 years, and I have used Fedora and RedHat through a
large fraction of them (I remember RedHat 4 - not EL 4, just 4). In
fact, I remember kernel 0.99.
And PulseAudio didn't work for me.
I dove in and fixed it, submitting a bug to the Fedora gods about what
didn't work for me. It was closed as NOTABUG. Something I find
inscrutable as, it was, indeed a bug. It was a bug because I installed
Fedora and something didn't work on first install. Not good enough for
these guys, though, apparently it must be something I did wrong.
Perhaps that was installing Fedora. Perhaps not. I haven't yet
decided. Now that I have a better idea of what Fedora is about, Centos
is looking much more appealing to me.
Perhaps it was something Mr. Heskett could have easily figured out if
he'd been more knowledgeable about it or spent more time on it. That
point is well taken. However, having people such as you insisting that
there is no problem with PulseAudio because you've had no problems with
it rubs me the wrong way. Perhaps Mr. Heskett's system is too heavily
customized. Mine was not. Yet I got the exact same response, "Oh, it's
your problem, you must have screwed up somewhere".
If no one's going to take people seriously when they say they are having
problems with PulseAudio, and people are just going to force PulseAudio
down peoples' throats when it's not working while insisting the problems
are all in the head of the user, well, there's really nothing more to be
said.
Thanks.
--Russell
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