Wscurtis5@xxxxxxx wrote: > In a message dated 1/17/2005 10:45:31 PM Central Standard Time, > fedora-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx writes: > > Message: 2 > Date: Mon, 17 Jan 2005 19:08:08 -0800 > From: Dave <fedora-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Subject: Re: FC3 Still Hates Me: No Sound > To: For users of Fedora Core releases <fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx> > Message-ID: <200501171908.08452.fedora-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8" > > The latest kernel update seems to have had SOME effect. Sound now works ... > sort of. If I turn the mixer volume up to 100%, and crank up the physical > volume control on my speakers, and everybody in the house shuts up, I can > hear some whisper of sound coming out of the speakers. > > OK, that last is an exaggeration. I haven't gagged my family, but the sound > IS > coming out extremely low. > you can also try (#1 from main menu, choose system settings>sound card <snip> Mr / Mrs /Miss Curtis, Could I humbly ask you to rethink the way that you quote e-mails? It would make life easier for us. To begin with, "Subject: Re: fedora-list Digest, Vol 11, Issue 255" is not exactly descriptive. Your e-mail won't be displayed near anyone else's e-mails on the same subject, because you changed the subject line and because quoting plain-text digests doesn't preserve the references (e-mail programs can use these to connect related e-mails). This means that unless Dave reads the *entire* list, he won't spot your e-mail. And if he scans the subject lines, he won't know he will get anything out of your message. You may find switching to MIME-format digests easier: you will be able to reply to individual e-mails, and the references and subject will be preserved. You can do this by logging into the mailing list administration site: the address is in the standard list signature at the bottom of each e-mail. In the second place, it's not at all obvious what you're quoting and what is you saying something new. Changes in font or text colour don't travel well through mailing lists, and a lot of people here run mail clients that don't show them anyway (HTML mail is a security hazard). The standard is to put something in front of each line you quote, like I did with your quote. ("> ", like I used, is most standard). I realise that you may be limited by your e-mail program here: it looks like you're still on the Windows AOL client. Welcome to the list, and I hope that you enjoy your adventures with Fedora. James. -- E-mail address: james | Mike Andrews' Corollary to Murphy's Law: @westexe.demon.co.uk | In any sufficiently large collection of texts, every | possible misspeeling, as well as some that are not | possible, will occur.