i have install Linux perfectly but after installing a pop come up that your >sound card is not found. Now i am unable to play music in linux.
First of all please run a spell check. It's there so why not use it ? But that's beside the point (Please ANYone, do not take offense, pretty please) To put it shortly, by personal experience, except Suse I haven't heard music from a Linux box ever. Something or the other always screws up. But that doesn't mean it isn't possible. It just means I'm lazy
For further assistance, please post your linux distro and soundcard model or any identification marks if present. It's a standing record ... 5 mins and no one has unholstered his flamethrower yet.
Gishu
Sometime on Tue, Nov 15, 2005 at 02:04:25PM +0530, Pillai, Gishu R (GE Energy) said:
To put it shortly, by personal experience, except Suse I haven't heard music from a Linux box ever. Something or the other always screws up. But that doesn't mean it isn't possible. It just means I'm lazy
Ubuntu played music from most of the systems in my case. I might have been too much lucky you see :)
It's a standing record ... 5 mins and no one has unholstered his flamethrower yet.
Are we playing flamethrower flamethrower? If the OP does not give enough/detailed information, then nobody replies to it. Simple.
Anurag
To put it shortly, by personal experience, except Suse I haven't heard music from a Linux box ever.
Lets see I've heard music (mp3 included) on redhat9, suse, mandrake, debian and I'm sure whatever your distro is you could get the music up...
#lspci (see the output of your sound card) or #scanpci -v
not quiet sure right now of other distros on debian run `alsaconf` follow the steps as the ncuses shows you..
On redhat or fedora try redhat-configure-sound or system-configure-sound..
On suse try yast (sound config section) it will be easy...
Derwyn