On Thu, 8 Jan 2015, Arve Barsnes wrote:
On 8 January 2015 at 15:10, Len Ovens <len@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Just? Just routing all programs to alsa means each or any blocks all others.
One ends up with the mess that at least three audio servers have been tried
of which Pulse seems to be the one that has been chosen
I keep seeing people say this, but I have never noticed any program
blocking the sound of any other. I can play sound from mplayer,
audaciuos, audacity, firefox, whatever, all at the same time, never
had pulseaudio installed, everything through alsa. What am I doing
wrong? :p
I've been wanting to say the same thing up until now, but I thought
maybe I was missing something stupid. I haven't had problems with
exclusive sound access either, at least since the OSS days. If
anything, that was one of the big improvements going to Alsa from OSS --
no more device contention between applications, no more need for
horrible esound and artsd userspace daemons to try to multiplex streams
for you. Now, apparently, even Alsa needs userspace help to deal with
consumer audio. But why? It already worked!
--
+ Brent A. Busby + "We've all heard that a million monkeys
+ Sr. UNIX Systems Admin + banging on a million typewriters will
+ University of Chicago + eventually reproduce the entire works of
+ James Franck Institute + Shakespeare. Now, thanks to the Internet,
+ Materials Research Ctr + we know this is not true." -Robert Wilensky
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