Hi Jim. If what we heard on the reflecter over the weekend is a sample then your sound card will probably not work. Larry Bagget has been trying to get his Maestro card up and running for quite a while and hasn't had much success. By the way, you should use the echo server, not the reflecter to test your card. You were generating pure white noise over the weekend, and not reading or not receiving chats when people were asking you to stop. nthis is ot very polite behavior. The address for the echo server is lwl.braille.uwo.ca. The only difference is that you don't put the :4074 on the end of the address. The echo server will allow you to send about 10 seconds of audio to it, and then send the same audio back to you. It's a great way to find out whether your sound card is working, and whether you need to adjust your volume controls or not. The ALSA drivers can be found at http://www.alsa-project.org/. Be very sure to read the INSTALL file that comes with the drivers, and particularly pay attention to the section for your sound card. There are a couple of complete examples of additions you'll need to make to your /etc/modules.conf file for most distributions, or your /etc/modutils/aliases file for Debian. Using your favorite editor, you can copy the configuration examples into a file, and then edit it to meet your needs. When you have your configuration file the way you want it, save it, and paste it onto the bottom of your /etc/modules.conf file, or your /etc/modutils/aliases file. If your running Debian, you'll have to run update-modules after editing your aliases file. Finally, you'll need three files from the alsa-projects site. Alsa-driver-0.xx.xx, alsa-lib-0.xx.xx and alsa-utils-0.xx.xx. All of the files have a tar.gz or tar.bz2 suffix. The xx stands for the version number of the alsa drivers, and you should get driver, library and utility files with the same version number. You'll need to install the drivers, then the libraries, and finally the utilities in that order. The libraries look to see if the drivers are installed, and the utilities depend on the libraries, so you'll have to compile and install things exactly in this order. As I said, I think your sound card may be broken from what we heard on the reflecter over the weekend, but using the Alsa drivers may fix the problem. It's certainly worth a try. Gene Collins >will the alsa drivers work with my amaestro iie sound card? >Where can I find and install these drivers from? > > > > >_______________________________________________ >Speakup mailing list >Speakup at braille.uwo.ca >http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup