- cross-posted to:
- linuxhumor@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- linuxhumor@lemmy.ml
There’s always sound.
It takes one second to start and there is some crackling with plenty of forum posts explaining how to fix these things going back to 2005 that are no longer relevant because the sound uses something with a different name now.
BUT THERE’S ALWAYS SOUND!
If a sound plays but there’s no audio server to receive it and convert it to an analog signal, does it make a sound?
Sometimes there’s no sound because someone (looks at cat) ate the cables…
Ever since Pipewire was introduced my sound just… works. Aside from missing drivers (super rarely) I have absolutely no issues.
I got super deep into synths and Linux audio years ago, and right around the same one Pipewire was starting to go mainstream. Shit just worked man!
Cause the nerds live underground…
And I’m thinking, “what a mess were in! Hard to know where to begin.”
Vintage Linux meme. I like it.
i’m so confused whenever i see this, i’ve been using linux since 2012 and sound has always just worked? I can’t think of a single time I’ve had an audio problem that wasn’t damaged hardware
I’ve had a few issues along the years. Linux user since 1997
It depends. The old ALSA system was flaky from what I remember. Pipewire seems more stable, but can have issues with multiple devices but that might be more a bluetooth problem.
I’ve also had constant audio problems in windows, including every update shuffling all my audio devices and making a random one default and switching to the wrong device when connecting a new one.
Bluetooth. Like it works most of the time, but especially randomly the microphone does not work
I installed Mint on my relatively new HP laptop. The sound works about 33% of the time.
Fedora 43, they break sound often by different means
Pulseaudio moment
I had a laptop with the opposite problem, it would just screech at full volume from the deepest pits of computer hell
had that problem with mint, randomly out of the blue a horrifyingly loud screech
Keep calm and
pulseaudio -k
I once had a problem with my sound, then i remembered that my headphones weren’t plugged in. That was the only time i had no sound in linux
15 years ago I would occasionally have audio issues. These days? Nah
I do sometimes, but sometimes it’s because my headphones are plugged into my monitor and I have 2 monitors and it sometimes chooses the wrong one and I don’t know how to disable the other one in the gui in mint and haven’t bothered to do it in command line yet 😅. Other times it’s because my monitor has very temperamental displayport and hdmi ports and it gets disconnected if I bump the desk, but that happens regardless of what operating system I’m using.
I spend more time dealing with my partners windows machine when it does an update getting their audio up and back to what it was, then I have with linux in 8 years (at least). And I did a major change from deb based into redhat base. And I dont even think its a bleeding edge distro issue, as I do run a Nobara system and that is based on fedora (which is still considered bleeding edge for the most part).
Thanks for the accessibility text!
Who cares about sounds when you can see gamma rays :3
I care.
ALSA worked fine for me. Pulseaudio needed constant fixing.
I had some issues in pre-2019 between alsa and pulse. I don’t think I have had any sound issues since then
Long ago, I had SoundBlaster Live! soundcard which was perfectly capable of mixing audio on hardware under ALSA, which in my mind meant that all of the userland sound daemon nonsense could go straight to hell for all I cared. Earlier, EsounD never worked right and no app supported it directly and the wrapper utility was a hassle when it even worked. Then came PulseAudio. I could get buuutttery smooth audio on direct ALSA or laggy barely working audio on Pulse. Absolute hog.
Sure, nowadays the situation is better. But back in the day, for me, the answer to “why isn’t the sound working?” was usually “you tried to use anything but direct ALSA”.
I have not made the switch to Linux in the days where I still had a dedicated sound card. But I had extremely similar circumstances without a dedicated sound card. So I definitely believe you
Funny. My experience was the exact opposite. Maybe it was bad defaults which I never managed to fix, but I could never get two apps to use sound at the same time, which meant until Pulse became the standard and fixed everything, it was always constant battles between aRts, ESD, and apps that used neither.
In fact, I actually prefer jamming on my Linux boxes because of pulseeffects/easyeffects and its really nice EQ, AutoGain and other plugins.
https://github.com/megankde/pulseeffects https://github.com/wwmm/easyeffects
Recently my speakers have been switching left/right. I was physically swapping them for a while, now I try and ignore it. I’m sure there’s some eldritch linux magic I too new to know like alsamixer that will fix it.
How are they connected
USB cable to the main speaker, proprietary cable from the first speaker to the second. It has blue tooth I’ve never connected to.









