Not that I can tell. It doesn't happen if I just unplug my power cable, only after a suspend. Also, pulseaudio dies by itself if I stop alsa with a reload. Gnome power manager also doesn't use a whole bunch of ram once pulseaudio does die.
does fix it, though, as I said, pulseaudio dies by itself afterwards. I can then just run pulseaudio, and restart an app if it uses sound, and it works again.
Not that I can tell. It doesn't happen if I just unplug my power cable, only after a suspend. Also, pulseaudio dies by itself if I stop alsa with a reload. Gnome power manager also doesn't use a whole bunch of ram once pulseaudio does die.
doing this: d/alsa- utils stop d/alsa- utils start
sudo /etc/init.
sudo alsa force-reload
sudo /etc/init.
does fix it, though, as I said, pulseaudio dies by itself afterwards. I can then just run pulseaudio, and restart an app if it uses sound, and it works again.