"If you have tried all the other fixes for sound in flash. Close all browsers and open programs. Open a terminal and type in Code: killall esd Then start Firefox and see if flash has sound. If it dose you may have to do this to make sure that other applications are not using the sound card." from: http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=202537&highlight=sound "Can't get sound and compiz to work" from: http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=792183&highlight=sound "broken sound after upgrade" from: http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=795853&highlight=sound Those were just a few of the hits on the first page of results for a search of "sound" on the ubuntu forums. Without fail it was a case of using incompatible audio backends. In the sense that there is a known way to make the audio work (set up all apps manually to use the same backend, or only use one backend at a time), then yeah it is "fixed". In terms of usability, it is not fixed until people don't need to start these threads. Once again, I am a Linux advocate, and if there actually was a consistant software mixing backend installed in linux systems, I would probably be manually turning it off by personal preference. But I would hardly consider the issue fixed yet for a typical desktop user. You don't see many graphic apps expecting to hog all of the the framebuffers, or refusing to work with any but one window manager, why should we expect less of sound? For most users audio is less of a baseline usability issue, so the infrastructure is less mature and it is easier to cope with it being broken. But it is still broken. As I said, I have been using Linux for over a decade, primarily for audio, and I don't have all my audio apps set to use the same backend, and I have to pick between audio using apps (if I want to watch a youtube video in firefox I need to shut down my jack server, and most of the apps using it, first, or download the raw file so I can watch it in an app that uses jack - unless there is some way to do this with portaudio I am ignorant of? I have had zero luck making jack use dmix). for reference, here is a url for the search: http://ubuntuforums.org/search.php?searchid=41308245 On Thu, May 15, 2008 at 2:43 PM, Lee Revell <rlrevell@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Thu, May 15, 2008 at 4:16 PM, Justin Smith <noisesmith@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> For all I know you are right, but the Ubuntu forums are full of people >> claiming to have this problem. What is this solution you speak of? I >> know you could mean pulseaudio or dmix or esd or arts or jackd, or >> something else I haven't heard of, but which one? We all know you >> cannot use them all together with a normal sound card. > > First it was solved with dmix by default back in ALSA 1.0.8 or so, > then more recently solved in a better way with Pulseaudio. > > Got any pointers to forum threads? > > Lee > _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user