On 26/08/09 00:51, stan wrote: > No idea? It should be turned off. Run > alsamixer -c 1 > and use the arrow keys to go to the entries that have IEC958 in them. > Use 0 to turn them off, and down arrow to lower volumes if necessary. > Do the same procedure with > alsamixer -c 0 Done. >> In the tab "Output Devices" I also see two areas, the first named >> "Simultaneous output or internal Audio" and the next "internal >> Audio". Which devices do they relate to? > > The internal sound device, the one on the motherboard. This is card 0 and the one I want to disable. > > It doesn't sound like you need to disable the CS46 in pulse because it > isn't seeing it anyway, though alsa is. There is probably a bug there, > but it suits your purposes. CS46xx is card 1 and that's where the speakers are connected. > > So after the above adjustments, if you use a sound application, say > audacity, and go into Edit -> Preferences and change the output device > to alsa hw:1,0, import a sound file, it should play. Or do the > equivalent with another sound application. And aplay -D plughw:1,0 > some.wav should play sound. If the CS46 card is connected to speakers > or an amp or tuner (i.e. it has a way to actually *play* the sound). Yes, that works but audacity is the only application on my system that allows this hw:1,0 specification. I assume it bypasses PulseAudio. Could it be that PulseAudio is only able to talk to card 0? -- Erik. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines