Paul Smith wrote: > On Tue, Dec 30, 2008 at 5:39 PM, Nigel Henry > <cave.dnb2m97pp@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> After some updates, the volume of audio became too low. Any ideas? I >>> am using F10. >>> >> As usual I suspect Pulseaudio as the culprit, as it can be responsible for low >> volume levels. >> >> First though, open alsamixer as user in a terminal, as below. >> >> alsamixer -D hw:0 >> >> Assuming that your card is card0, this should show all sliders for your >> soundcard. Check for ones like, Master, PCM, Front, CD, which should be up. >> >> If all's ok in alsamixer, try disabling Pulseaudio (unless you particularly >> want it), by removing the package, alsa-plugins-pulseaudio, then reboot, and >> see if the sound levels are any better. > > Thanks, Nigel and David. After having played a bit with alsamixer, I > got the audio back to its usual volume. I do not know how was it > changed without my intervention... Paul, I don't know just why volume levels change. And I am sorry for my sarcastic post. Well. A little. ;-) Pulseaudio, a utility used to set different audio levels for different sources, works. For me. To 'remove' Pulseaudio from your Linux install because you are having a minor problem with it is self-defeating. I mean Linux is supposed to be better than Microsoft Windows right? Good that you solved your problem. -- David -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines