2009/7/24 Mike Williams <dmikewilliams@xxxxxxxxx>: > I'm sure many will appreciate it if you write something up. No promises but I've made a note on my ever expanding to-do list. :) > This regression issue and the bug fix breakage could be valuable clues > to developers, have you filed a bug report about this? Yes, I did a month or two ago. https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=499435 > As for myself, I have yet to get sound working on F11, although I > haven't put too much effort into it, yet. I would recommend that first you try disabling, but not un-installing pulseaudio (see my earlier post in this thread on how to do this). Also, don't try the same audio app over and over when you are testing. Different apps work differently. I would suggest you try each of the following: 1. A media player which uses phonon - e.g. amarok. (In this case there are a couple of issues, phonon on linux has two backends - gstreamer and xine.) On my home PC I have problems with the xine backend - "yum remove phonon-backend-xine" fixes things for me. Also, make sure you've got all the gstreamer plugins installed. That involves installing rpmfusion, doing "yum search gstreamer-plugins", and installing at least the "good", "bad" and "ugly" rpms. 2. A media player which has built-in decoders - e.g. vlc. When I say built-in, it relies on ffmpeg for its decoding AFAIK. 3. The flash plugin within firefox - I don't know what backend it uses but I've found it often works when nothing else does! I'd suggest you try each of those with and without pulseaudio and it might give you some clues as to where the problem is. PITA I know but I've been through it all! :) HTH, Chris. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines