<br><br><div class="gmail_quote">2010/1/7 david <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:gnome@hawaii.rr.com" target="_blank">gnome@hawaii.rr.com</a>></span><br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
<div>Andras Simon wrote:<br>
> On 1/6/10, J. Simon van der Walt <<a href="mailto:tedthetrumpet@gmail.com" target="_blank">tedthetrumpet@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<br>
><br>
>> Second, probably stupidly basic and annoying question; as soon as I<br>
>> launch Jack, I lose all sound from the YouTube video I'm trying to<br>
>> watch in Firefox. How does one get around that?<br>
><br>
> You can probably download the video (there are various scripts around<br>
> that'll do that for you, but usually the simplest way is to watch the<br>
> video in firefox and then rename the resulting /tmp/FlashXXXXXXX<br>
> file), and then play it in a jack-aware media player, such as mplayer.<br>
> Unfortunately, on some distributions, the jack capability is not<br>
> compiled in mplayer.<br></div></blockquote></div><br>Seeing this thread today and having faced the same problem a few days earlier , I googled for an answer and came across a small personal .asoundrc which claims to solve
it by creating a temporary ALSA to jack bridge. Now I don't know much
about the internalsa of ALSA routings and I cretainly do not muck
around with .asoundrc files, but this seemed OK , so I tried it, and it
worked flawlessly in my setup <br>Opensuse 11.2 32bit, Terratec Phase22 24bit<br>jack 0.118.0 from obs://<a href="http://build.opensuse.org/home:edogawa" target="_blank">build.opensuse.org/home:edogawa</a> repository, <br>
alsa 1.0.21<br>firefox 3.5.6, flash-player 10.0.42.34<br><br>I'm not sure if this will help, YMMV, but maybe someone more in the know will step up.<br>
<br>Just copy it in your home dir as .asoundrc (DO backup the original, if any...)<br>-- <br> /"\<br> \ / ASCII RIBBON CAMPAIGN<br> X AGAINST HTML EMAIL<br>
/ \ AND POSTINGS<br><br>