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and have you opend kmix and checked the chanels to make shur thar all visable and make shur thar all unmuted and the sliders ar up?
I opened up all of them, but only three seem to have any effect on maximum volume. Those are all maxed out, and the sound is so low, I can't hear it if I put my ear RIGHT up to the speakers.
Now granted this notebook isn't going to be the loudest thing in the world, but I know it's at least audible.
Attention is the currency of internet forums. - Ticopelp
Not stated, and almost to obvious, but, have you checked the volume control slider/wheel on the laptop?
Windows no longer obstructs my view.
Using Kubuntu Linux since March 23, 2007.
"It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data." - Sherlock Holmes
A laptop with no manual volume control? What manufacture and model?
Windows no longer obstructs my view.
Using Kubuntu Linux since March 23, 2007.
"It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data." - Sherlock Holmes
PulseAudio, previously known as Polypaudio, is a sound server for POSIX and
WIN32 systems. It is a drop in replacement for the ESD sound server with
much better latency, mixing/re-sampling quality and overall architecture.
PulseAudio Volume Control (pavucontrol) is a simple GTK+ based volume
control tool (mixer) for the PulseAudio sound server. In contrast to
classic mixer tools this one allows you to control both the volume of
hardware devices and of each playback stream separately. It also allows
you to redirect a playback stream to another output device without
interrupting playback.
DESCRIPTION
PulseAudio Manager (paman) is a simple GTK frontend for the PulseAudio sound server. With paman you may browse most of PulseAudio´s
internals. There is support for changing the volume of sinks and sink inputs. You´re also able to play samples from the sample cache.
OPTIONS
paman does not accept any options.
SEE ALSO
pulseaudio(1), padevchooser(1)
@Snowhog, the little netbooks don't have external volume controls, in some/many cases. Neither my Asus EeePC 701 nor my Toshiba NB205 have one.
I've had varying degrees of success and failures with Pulse. It depends, from what I've experienced, to the machine and how the sound device is configured by the Mfg.
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