Well modified initially resample-method to resample-method=speex-float-1, and the sound was chopy, but modified now to resample-method=speex-float-0 and works fine. OK, I need to know what proper backend to use. This is a distribution and I suppose people want something that works out of the box. Can xine do it? Or I should go to VLC (note this is a GNU distro, so only freeeeeee :)) On Thu, Dec 9, 2010 at 22:29, Colin Guthrie <gmane at colin.guthr.ie> wrote: > 'Twas brillig, and Robert Gabriel at 09/12/10 21:22 did gyre and gimble: >> OK, seems to work but daemon.conf needs some tweaks. > > Great! > Out of curiosity, what did you need to tweak? > >> As a stupid question, does xine support pulseaudio? > > Not a stupid question! It does have a pulseaudio output layer but in my > experience it kinda sucks. Xine is not really actively developed any > more and it's very much lost favour by the KDE community. Most hopes are > being currently pinned on VLC. It's pulseaudio support is also not great > at the moment but I'm hoping to find time to make it work nicely. > > GStreamer has some issues as a Phonon backend, but has very good > pulseaudio integration. > > Nothing is ever perfect! > > Col > > > -- > > Colin Guthrie > gmane(at)colin.guthr.ie > http://colin.guthr.ie/ > > Day Job: > ?Tribalogic Limited [http://www.tribalogic.net/] > Open Source: > ?Mageia Contributor [http://www.mageia.org/] > ?PulseAudio Hacker [http://www.pulseaudio.org/] > ?Trac Hacker [http://trac.edgewall.org/] > > _______________________________________________ > pulseaudio-discuss mailing list > pulseaudio-discuss at mail.0pointer.de > https://tango.0pointer.de/mailman/listinfo/pulseaudio-discuss >