Generally speaking, the "USB soundcard" is the last fallback of an
experienced Linux user if you are unhappy what is in your laptop. Be it the
Bluetooth software stack or the fighting with crappy driver support for the
physical sound card hardware.
But thanks for pointing out that solution.
Andreas
Am Mi., 14. Okt. 2020 um 11:05 Uhr schrieb Falc <<email address hidden>
>:
Generally speaking, the "USB soundcard" is the last fallback of an
experienced Linux user if you are unhappy what is in your laptop. Be it the
Bluetooth software stack or the fighting with crappy driver support for the
physical sound card hardware.
But thanks for pointing out that solution.
Andreas
Am Mi., 14. Okt. 2020 um 11:05 Uhr schrieb Falc <<email address hidden>
>:
> I can confirm that the above solution works well. I bought a similar but /www.amazon. co.uk/gp/ product/ B086L2WNPG/ ref=ppx_ yo_dt_b_ asin_title_ o06_s00? ie=UTF8& psc=1 /bugs.launchpad .net/bugs/ 1838151 /bugs.launchpad .net/pulseaudio /+bug/1838151/ +subscriptions
> slightly cheaper one:
>
> https:/
>
> Basically the dongle pairs directly to your headset and acts as a usb
> sound card. By far the easiest solution I've found.
>
> --
> You received this bug notification because you are subscribed to the bug
> report.
> https:/
>
> Title:
> Poor quality audio with modern Bluetooth headsets in HSP/HFP. Missing
> wide band speech support (Bluetooth A2DP codecs).
>
> To manage notifications about this bug go to:
> https:/
>