Hi, That is indeed promising news, but if you don't want to compile FF right off the bat there are other options for Debian users. The easiest would be to install falkTX's 'Cadence' application from his Debian compatible KX Studio repositories. Cadence is an alternate frontend to set up JACK and also includes an implementation of the ALSA Loopback which should route your browser Audio from ALSA to your selected JACK device. Cadence is best suited to working with JACK2 but does work with JACK1 as well.. Secondly AV Linux which is now based on Debian Testing also has an 'aloop-daemon' which is a more minimalistic implementation of ALSA Loopback and is intended to work with JACK1 and Qjackctl, at the current time this is only readily available in AV Linux itself but with sufficient interest the packages could be made avaialable however the AV Linux way requires a little extra config fiddling than just installing the packages but I could explain further if you are interested. Glen Peter P. wrote: > Hi Robin, > > * Robin Gareus <robin@xxxxxxxxxx> [2016-06-15 12:18]: >> On 06/15/2016 10:00 AM, Peter P. wrote: >> > Hi list, >> > >> > I have been search the archives and the web a bit and it seems there >> is >> > no easy way to route html5 audio playback from firefox through jack on >> > Debian testing. >> >> Wait for another week or three. >> >> Firefox/git features native JACK input & output since last week. Largely >> thanks to Damien Zammit. > Thanks to Damien as well as to you Robin to let us know. Do you know > what version number this is, and when this might become available as > debian package? > > cheers cheers! > Peter > _______________________________________________ > Linux-audio-user mailing list > Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user > _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user