Sure, I would be glad to tell you what I have done so far. First, I am using Debian so I did an apt-get install alsa-oss. I then placed the attached asound.conf in /etc. Then I recompiled the kernel and took out the two OSS entries, rebooted and I can now do the following: aoss ogg123 myfile.ogg and while that is running I am able to do things like: aoss saytime And I can hear both audio streams. I have not yet been able to get it working with zinf though. Keith On 10:19 AM, Cheryl Homiak wrote: > I can't answer your question except to ask whether you have ALSADevice: > 0:0 in your > .zinf/preferences. Can you explain to me how you are > playing multiple audio sources. I have a Thinkpad T23 and according to > lspci the sound chip is > Multimedia audio contoller Intel Corporation 82801CA/CAM AC97 audio > controller (rev 02) I can only use one audio source at a time and didn't > know there might be a way to have it do otherwise. Would you please > explain specifically what you did? In my kernel configuration I'm using > the Intel/SiS/nVidia//AMD/ALi Ac97 Controller. > Thanks. > > > -- > Cheryl > > "Where your treasure is, there will your heart be also." > > > _______________________________________________ > Speakup mailing list > Speakup at braille.uwo.ca > http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup -------------- next part -------------- # Redirect default to swmixer pcm.!default { type plug slave.pcm "swmixer" } # Redirect OSS dsp0 (when using aoss rapper) to swmixer pcm.dsp0 { type plug slave.pcm "swmixer" } # Set OSS mixer (when using aoss rapper) to use hardware mixer ctl.mixer0 { type hw card 0 } # Software mixing # We could use the dmix plug from the default alsa.conf, but we need to specify # period_size, buffers, etc. pcm.swmixer { type dmix ipc_key 5678293 ipc_key_add_uid yes slave { pcm "hw:0,0" period_time 0 period_size 1024 buffer_size 4096 rate 44100 } }