Hi. I've searched a lot, ank that I found something here. http://superuser.com/questions/87571/how-to-hear-mic-sound-over-speakers-ubuntu-karmic I'm not sitting with a Linux computer at the moment. Can you test this for me so I know if this works? It would be nice to know if this works Before I search more. Also I've read about something called jackaudio. Do you Think that this thing works? /Kristoffer 2015-07-23 6:42 GMT+02:00, Kristoffer Gustafsson <kg.kristoffer@xxxxxxxxx>: > Hi. > How do you use alsamixer as a blind user then? > I'm using a braille display. > I used it, and I had to guess what I was doing all the time. > I've read that some cards doesn'tt support the hardware solution. > How much delay do you thing I will get with the software way? > So much as I get in windows? > There I got such a delay/echo that I Went cracy. > /Kristoffer > > 2015-07-23 3:19 GMT+02:00, Joel Roth <joelz@xxxxxxxxx>: >> Kristoffer Gustafsson wrote: >>> Hi. >>> I would like to do some Linux podcasts. >>> to do that I want to record the things from my soundcard. >>> And I also want to get the sound from my microphone into my headset so >>> I can hear what I'm doing, and get that recorded at the same time. >>> Have you done such a thing Before? >>> /Kristoffer >> >> Hi Kristoffer, >> >> Even the cheapest built-in soundcards can be used for >> recording and playback under Linux. >> >> Live monitoring depends in some part on the abilities of >> your soundcard. >> >> Hardware monitoring, if your soundcard supports it, >> will let you hear what your microphone picks up without >> delay. However this function must be turned on. >> >> Software monitoring is where an audio app captures the sound >> and streams it to the soundcard output. In that case there >> may be some latency--a small audible delay--between input >> and output. >> >> You can control soundcard mixer levels, and possibly turn on >> hardware monitoring with amixer (see 'man amixer'). I'm more >> familiar with alsamixer, which uses ncurses. >> >> The ALSA sound libraries come with command-line recording/playback apps >> aplay and arecord. >> >> For more featureful audio production, you may like to >> investigate Ecasound, a flexible and powerful application >> capable of multitrack recording, or Nama, a digital audio >> workstation based on Ecasound. By default, Nama mixes its >> audio sources (live, prerecorded) and sends them to the >> soundcard output. >> >> Ecasound is probably packaged for your distribution. >> Nama can be installed using the 'cpan' or 'cpanm' >> perl software installers. >> >> These are all terminal-friendly applications. >> >> If you use orca or other accessibility software, you may >> be able to use GUI apps such as Audacity. >> >> Here is an older-but-still-useful guide to audio production >> on Linux for blind users. >> >> 1. http://ltsb.sourceforge.net/index.html >> >> And the author's own website. >> >> 2. http://juliencoder.de/ >> >> Note: The above assumes a vanilla linux system with ALSA. If >> you have pulseaudio installed, you will need to learn to PA >> way to do things, remove it, or disable it using pasuspender >> ('man pasuspender'). >> >> The best resource for audio on Linux is the Linux Audio >> Users mailing list. Ecasound and Nama also have their respective >> lists. >> >> Hope this helps. >> >> Joel >> >>> -- >>> Kristoffer Gustafsson >> >> -- >> Joel Roth >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Blinux-list mailing list >> Blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx >> https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list >> > > > -- > Kristoffer Gustafsson > Salängsgatan 7a > tel:033-12 60 93 > mobil: 0730-500934 > -- Kristoffer Gustafsson Salängsgatan 7a tel:033-12 60 93 mobil: 0730-500934 _______________________________________________ Blinux-list mailing list Blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list