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>linux defaults to 16 bit 44khz audio
David Nguyen
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Leo Davis
SOME
Jackson Morris
linux defaults to no audio.
like if you guys get it...
Christian Roberts
this
Asher Brooks
John White
No, seriously check your /etc/pulse/daemon.conf
Go down to the bitrate and frequency, remove the semicolons and put 24 or 32 bits and 96khz. Reboot. Notice the fucking diffeence holy fucking shit.
Xavier Williams
No Pulseaudio defaults to 16/44 on Linux...and Mac...and Windows.
Use a straight ALSA pass through like a Chad or shut the fuck up!
Robert Lopez
But I need an equalizer and I can't find one for pure alsa. Also how do I set the bit depth and frequency on alsa?
Sebastian Moore
>pulseaudio
Adam Rivera
how do i do this on Windows 10™?
Aaron Martinez
>not using jack like a real chad.
Ian Nelson
Are you on pulseaudio on windows 10? Find the config file. If not, just look up your current output device, right click, properties and look for that shit there. Don't go beyond 96khz.
Jaxon Taylor
Settings
Sound
Click on Sound Control Panel on the upper right
Right click on yout device
Click on Advanced
Kill yourself
Samuel Myers
holy fucking placebo
Brayden Harris
BODY
Dominic Stewart
>But I need an equalizer and I can't find one for pure alsa. Also how do I set the bit depth and frequency on alsa?
ALSA will output the bit rate/depth of the original file, no transcoding, no bullshit. For EQ you would have to output to an actual pre-amp or receiver.
Daniel Wood
So? It's a sensible default.
Colton Bailey
Also needs to be updated. Shitty default resample quality makes the audio quality sound like it was from the 20's radio.
Oliver Jenkins
> No such file or directory
My alsa.conf does use 192/24 though.
Jace Morris
>linux
>audio
PNU/Linux is console OS like DOS, you don't need sound on console
Jason Price
>Follow seemingly helpful hacking guide.
>Create mustard gas.
Camden Foster
what and W H Y should I change?
wiki.archlinux.org
post your ~/.config/pulse/daemon.conf
Jacob Ortiz
pulseaudio --dump-conf
>tells me what conf file it's reading from
Dominic Gutierrez
Read the posst above.
>why
Higher quality. From a $2 realtek to $200 xonar, you should use your harware to the max.
Matthew White
so this is the power of linux. having to dig up some obscure text file to do even the most trivial things.
Matthew Stewart
IDK man it's way easier this way, literally
sudo nano -w /etc/pulse/daemon.conf
Better than digging through windows's current flavor of the month edition of settings menu.
Jaxon Jackson
yep the whole reason i wont use linux is soundcard support
even tho my card is supported shit never works right
Evan Edwards
What's your SC?
Logan Hughes
sudo -e /etc/pulse/daemon.conf
Isaiah Hughes
My nigger here is legit.
Daniel Wood
Changing lives one shitpost at a time.
Christopher Nguyen
For real I thought it would delete my file system or some shit like it's sudo --erase
Bentley Cook
i went past 96khz and accidentally the whole thing, is this bad?
Benjamin Smith
16-bit 44.1KHz is CD-quality audio.
48KHz is the standard for high-quality audio with video.
Either value is acceptable.
If you actually knew anything about audio, you'd realise that this is already effectively "perfect" audio, and that anything above that is literally pure placebo. In fact, going above that can actually hurt audio quality.
people.xiph.org
Nicholas Martinez
IS THERE ANY FUCKING LINUX PLAYER OR SETTING THAT ALLOWS ME TO PLAY DSD NATIVELY FFS?!!!!
Nicholas Williams
>pulseaudio --dump-conf
I don't think I actually have it.
Dylan Bell
>post your ~/.config/pulse/daemon.conf
; exit-idle-time = -1
; default-fragments = 8
; default-fragment-size-msec = 2000
only three things I can remember changing.
>exit-idle-time
there used to be some noise every time pulse started to I just keep it on all the time, don't see a reason not to
>default-fragments
>default-fragment-size-msec
used to have some shit where pulse would start having small "skippy" audio when running for too long, or coming out of sleep. I think this fixed it, or maybe poettering fixed it, haven't tried defaults in a long time.
Ethan Walker
Absolute retard. Music is either 44.1 or 48khz, both of those are already perfect up to 20khz, which is limit of most audio devices and outside of your hearing range. Setting anything over that only makes sense with bitperfect, and its essentially audio autism, you gain nothing from it.
Ethan Carter
ONCE
Gabriel Howard
Come on, if you wanted your computer to actually function as expected you should have gotten a Mac you normal faggot iToddler.
Levi James
ok this is epic
look at this placebo basedboy retard
Oliver Edwards
OSS and Boomer basically just work
problem is, Boomer isn't quite OSS compatible so stuff like virtualbox can't properly route audio with it, and the only other thing here is pulseaudio and the native/legacy sound system
Christian Davis
>16 bit
>44.1 Kc
sounds normal to me
>pulseaudio
>Windoiws
you wut
Ayden Evans
avoid-resample = true
You're welcome
Jose Turner
>>pulseaudio
>>Windoiws
>you wut
>Microsoft Windows was previously supported via the MinGW toolchain (implementation of the GNU toolchain, which includes various tools such as GCC and binutils). The Windows port has not been updated since 2011, however
Oliver Gomez
yeah i'm aware
i'm surprised *because* the pulse win32 stuff is for Windows 2000/XP, doesn't play well with the modern audio stack
Leo Russell
>what is Nyquist rate and human hearing range
David Harris
I get it. Linux is a kernel.
Connor Brown
sudo touch /usr/bin/pulseaudio
Chase White
1. it doesn't, if you're using pulseaudio it will adapt to the source you feed it
2. >implying you can hear hires audio
what did I expect from Jow Forums
why did I even reply
pearls before swine...
Chase Taylor
>you still have to edit some config file and reboot for shit to just work on Linux
HAHAHA
Ethan Wilson
No, most at least decent level DACs can do 192KHz
Adrian Nguyen
Unless you're using stereo (nightmare for multichannel) with a pre/end AMP, you're going to use software volume control. Unless you have a decent sound card that changes volume in the opamps, you're going to use the DAC for volume control.
Running a 24-bit capable DAC in 16-bit mode is going to reduce the quality when lowering the volume, while running it in 24-bit mode while listening to 16-bit content, you can go as low as 1% volume control and not lose quality.
Nathaniel Williams
I imagine restarting pulseaudio would be good enough.
Camden Wood
TOLD
Parker Rogers
i know default-sample-rate but whats the line for bitrate?
Andrew Robinson
But I thought SALSA was embedded into the kernel.
Dylan Jones
or log out/in again.