You are right. The setting that controls both headphones and speaker is
"PCM".
I selected that and both work.
Thanks,
Rob
On Tue, 2007-06-05 at 16:57 +0000, Emilio Pozuelo Monfort wrote:
> Hi Rob.
>
> That sounds like a sound card problem (that there's no master).
>
> Please, open gnome-volume-control, and see whether there is a track which controls everything.
> If there is, select it in gnome-sound-properties, and check whether it works.
> If there isn't, then try (in gnome-volume-control) to change the sound device (File>Change Device), and try again with it.
>
> Thanks
> Emilio
>
--
Rob Frohne, Ph.D., P.E., Professor
E.F. Cross School of Engineering
Walla Walla College
100 SW 4th St.
College Place, WA 99324
(509) 527-2075 http://www.wwc.edu/~frohro/
Hi Emilio,
You are right. The setting that controls both headphones and speaker is
"PCM".
I selected that and both work.
Thanks,
Rob
On Tue, 2007-06-05 at 16:57 +0000, Emilio Pozuelo Monfort wrote: control, and see whether there is a track which controls everything. properties, and check whether it works. control) to change the sound device (File>Change Device), and try again with it. www.wwc. edu/~frohro/
> Hi Rob.
>
> That sounds like a sound card problem (that there's no master).
>
> Please, open gnome-volume-
> If there is, select it in gnome-sound-
> If there isn't, then try (in gnome-volume-
>
> Thanks
> Emilio
>
--
Rob Frohne, Ph.D., P.E., Professor
E.F. Cross School of Engineering
Walla Walla College
100 SW 4th St.
College Place, WA 99324
(509) 527-2075
http://