I'm going to tempt fate here, you ready?
This hasn't happened to me since pulseaudio
Hint: :q!
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I'm going to tempt fate here, you ready?
This hasn't happened to me since pulseaudio
exactly this
My god, there's so many comments
Now run it on a pi zero
Configuring pipewire or pulseaudio is dark magic
Never buy an HP laptop for linux. They often try to have some gimmicky special audio hardware with terrible driver support
ty, noted.
My first experience with switching to Linux a few years ago was on an outdated, at the time, ~$400 HP laptop. Switching from Windows 10 to EndeavourOS, and everything just worked, including audio.
In fact, it still works great whenever I turn it on like a few times a year.
Many hardware companies have the same problem, they can output some decent hardware, but some other series are true lemons (especially for Linux/Unix, but for a lesser extent, for that other system as well). And beforehand, it's not always easy to know which is which. It's a common issue with laptop makers where the hardware is often more esoteric.
Never buy an HP laptop for linux.
Same with any Apple Intel based iMac
Driver support is non-existent. Audio via the speakers worked but no volume control, Bluetooth, thunderbolt, mic etc didn't work. Even the headphone socket didn't work.
Shit even the gpu (AMD) did work properly. Despite being a 5k panel resolution is stuck at 4k.
Sigh. Would have been a great Linux box if I could have gotten it to work
Which distro did you use? Or is it the same for all?
My elitebook 840 works fine on linux
hp victus16 is working fine with wireplumber. never buy hp because the anti customer practices, terrible build quality and supporting israel with hardware.
Strange I never had any problems with PW, for me it's probably the most reliable Linux software there is
the bluetooth pipewire pulseaudio mix could be a bit better.
It's gotten to the point that my bluetooth headphones will not connect to my laptop because I don't currently have any media playing.
Load up a youtube video, the audio device springs into life, offers it up as pulseaudio source, who signals to bluez that there is a valid audio profile and suddenly everything connects.
From an efficiency standpoint, yes I get it. From a UX standpoint... please just let my earphones connect when I enable bluetooth from the get go
Had to change the quantum because I had audio "cracks"/bug sounds, cutting audio..
I have a terrible confession: i have loads of audio issues im dealing with atm. My desktop setup basically gets confused and stops working whenever i try to switch fom headphones to speaker, and my two laptops just do not want to pair with my bluetooth headphones unless i futz with bluetoothctl every time
Anyway, tangent aside. my terrible confession is that i go to linuxmemes for tech support, someone pls help
I've had a bunch of audio issues crop up for me as well, after upgrading to Pop 24.04 and the new cosmic DE. I used to have keyboard shortcuts that would reliabily switch from headphones to speakers, but those are hit or miss now. And when they miss, I have to go all the way into into alsamixer and unmute things until it works again. Which begs the question, why can't the normal audio settings UI do everything alsamixer can? Alsamixer isn't complicated, by any stretch. Literally just lets you adjust the volume of all the things on a particular audio card, and mute/unmute.
I have been using Arch daily for 13+ years and I still don't have a proper grasp on audio and Bluetooth..
Used raw ALSA, JACK, PulseAudio, and now Pipewire. I had major issues with all of them except ALSA.
I managed to disable devices like my webcam mic and PS5 mic, and even added a noise reduction filter to my real mic that shows up as it's own device, but..
Only because the Arch wiki told me specifically how to do those things. Audio just luckily seems to work fine for the most part, currently. I used qpwgraph to play with wireplumber and it's obviously very powerful, but I have no idea how it works :D
Bluetooth is a different story, it seems to work differently on every single device I've worked on..
Try to use a normal computer instead of trying to kick linux into a ATM.
Most ATMs are acually now linux based,. Weeell the new ones anyway. Old ones are still running on XP.
...i thought OS/2 was the industry's system of choice...
It used to be, but that was a long time ago.
Not sure, xp might be too new. I've definitely seen nt 4 on an ATM before.
okay here me out:
Pipewire is one of the best pieces of software I used. It has a cool ass patchbay and unlike PulseAudio I've never had it crash on me. It is the best thing that happened to Linux audio
I was blown away when I connected my phone to my PC through Bluetooth and phone audio started playing through my PC. It just worked without me touching anything
I also really like how "Linux Studio Plugins" are standalone apps that you can run. I don't produce music or anything but I still use stuff like equalizers and spectrum analyzers. It is insane how flexible the "each app has inputs and outputs you can hook together" architecture is.
PulseAudio probably also had some of these features but I never used those because pulse would fall apart every time I touched it. Pipewire doesn't
Broken Linux audio is about to become old news
Easy Effects is such a great app. I like a little bit more bass on my music, and it has presets for that as well!
i don't know about you but broken Linux audio has BEEN old news ever since i started using pipewire
Pipewire has some neat tricks that i use on a daily basis but i can also make it crash on demand so idk :p. I have a restart script in my home directory for that exact reason.
It just does not like audio going out my gpu, together with video, through my receiver and into my tv.
Receiver not on while linux was booting? Guess what, pipewire reboot.
Tv goes off because of "inactivity"? Thats a pipewire reboot
... And yet i love pipewire haha. But ye, audio issues are still a thing
Have you reported the crashing issue to the developers of pipewire?
Not yet. Ive been too busy tbh. I assume that, like many linux tools, its a bitch to report something. Not just a easy bug tracker or something
From what I found this is their official bug tracker
I definitely remember having to futz with audio a looooong time ago, but honestly getting xf86config to work with my video card and monitor was much more difficult.
The dark days of fucking with xorg.conf files and ndiswrapper to get WiFi working are things I'm glad no longer exist.
I fucked with Xorg literally yesterday to get my display working
Been around since OSS and ALSA was the new kid on the block. Yet to experience these supposed sound issues.
Yeah I am also running linux for 20 years or so. Minor hiccups here and there, but sound has been solid generally.
All i can say is, you have been a very lucky individual.
Ive not been using Linux for long, maybe only 5 years or so. But I've never had any audio issues.
My audio needs are not as straightforward as the average user. I play drums over midi into reaper. I have used guitars and mics through my audio interface. My midi controllers work without any issues.
Im using pipewire and running reaper with pipewire-jack. I've used mint for years with no issues, and now running debian Trixie with no issues.
Linux user for 20 years: in my days I has to compile X by hand if I wanted a graphic interface.
Linux users for 10 years: kinda worked, sometimes you had to install the same a couple of times with different configurations until one worked for you.
Linux user for 5 years: lmao, this easier than windows.
Gotta be real here for a moment, the last time I had any sort of trouble with audio on Linux was back in the day when I was still fiddling about with Gentoo. But that was, what, fifteen, twenty years ago?