Niels Mayer wrote:
Excited to
see http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2010/08/call-phones-from-gmail.html ,
I was quickly disappointed to find the plugin only supported debian and
was 32 bit. However, I persevered and got it running on Fedora 12 x86_64
anyways.
Solution:
http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/chat/thread?tid=10ffe01c3a4779f5&hl=en&fid=10ffe01c3a4779f500048eaedc559f0f
<http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/chat/thread?tid=10ffe01c3a4779f5&hl=en&fid=10ffe01c3a4779f500048eaedc559f0f>
Google ought to hire someone that knows about App Development and Linux
Audio and Fedora packaging (me?) to make the audio/video experience
nicer for it's Linux users. In particular, not just blindly using ALSA
devices for input that cannot possibly support audio capture,
Don't blame Google for that. On all five of the computers around here,
ALSA sets up the PC speaker as an input source!
although I
guess I'm a fringe-case since I don't use pulseaudio, since I've got
KDE's phonon setup to do the right thing w/r/t all my audio devices,
including the ones talking via Jackd.
( http://ccrma-mail.stanford.edu/pipermail/planetccrma/2010-May/016886.html ).
Also, not assuming every Linux user runs a debian/ubuntu distro would be
helpful as well :-)
But all five of the computers here run Debian and have for many years.
Outside a few folk on LAU, I don't know anyone who runs Fedora. So,
clearly, you are a fringe-case. ;-)
--
David
gnome@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
authenticity, honesty, community
_______________________________________________
Linux-audio-user mailing list
Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user