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Thanks for your insights.
22 from Loutraki/Greece.
Hello forum. I've been in love for years with minimalism on the desktop.
I really loved PekWM. I would love to hear your thoughts on the differences between Openbox and PekWM since I am new to Openbox.
Moderator Edit:
Please re-zise your thumbnails as per the first post in each screen shot thread:
Please use thumbnails (please try to avoid the large thumbnail imgur.com code) linking to the larger image to help those of us with slow connections. An example of the code needed is below. Most image hosting sites will automatically generate this for you as well. Users have been using postimage.org lately which does a nice job.
[url=http://link.to.your.fullsized.image][img]http://link.to.your.thumbnail.image[/img][/url]
Edit: Thanks for notice moderator. Will do next time. I don't have the thumbnails.
EDIT: Downloaded your images and uploaded them to postimage.org
To add a few things to this thread;
sudo bash <<EOF somecommand someothercommand EOF
This is nice
Since a script is not needed after all I removed it from GitHub O:) Learned a lot from the discussion.
^ For this noob, it's all Greek--or should I say Geek to me?
I am Greek. So...
I like the discussion a lot. Teaches me much. If you guys/gals have anything to add just send me a pull request, a patch, or just say it here
@aldoiljazi --- it's fantastic that you're trying to contribute and thank you for your efforts. However, your script still has that pesky "-y" flag in it...
@twoion really knows what he's doing --- please read his post (#2) again, carefully.
On a broader point, in Debian it really pays to pay attention to what APT (apt-get) tells you when you use it --- as such, IMO "upgrade scripts" are not really helpful; they just discourage closer interaction with the package management system.
Just run the command I gave in post #3 and read what apt-get prints out
I have.
I also changed the script a bit.
I removed clean and dist-upgrade.
Updated the script a bit. cb-update
Thanks for your recommendations.
Wrote a small script that updates CrunchBang.
That was Higher assistance, Head_on_a_Stick help and a lot of LUCK.....hehe
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I'm glad that you got it working
LR
Thanks a lot!
Thank $DEITY for that
True!
Hey just rebooted after installing Pulseaudio and alsa-utils and I have FULL SOUND! Yeiiii!
Thanks a lot guys!
I don't know sorry
Thanks anyway
I might leave Crunchbang because of this
^ There are lots of screens in the control panel --- check all the outputs (sinks) are unmuted
Nothing is muted. Still no sound.
Sorry, I can't remember how to do it
Maybe you could try setting up pulseaudio instead? Just fiddle with the control panel...
Okay I am trying Pulseaudio. When playing a sound file I can see the sound bar going up and down through Volume Control, but I don't hear anything.
This is related to your problem
http://crunchbang.org/forums/viewtopic.php?id=30381Hope it helps you like it helped me
Good Luck
LR
I have messed up. So what I did is I completely removed alsa-utils and pulseaudio. Now I don't know what to do
As I say, you could try hunting down & removing all pulseaudio-related files, move the alsa-base.conf to your home directory & replace it with the 1-line entry in my post above...
It's ironic really --- far easier to set up an install to use ALSA only from a minimal netinstall than it is to strip it out of a more "newbie-friendly" distro
I purged Pulseaudio. Did that. Doesn't work
Any thought?
It's been awhile since I stripped pulseaudio from a #! install & I can't quite remember how I did it.
I think I had to get rid of the config files left over from pulseaudio & re-configure ALSA (I think I just replaced the alsa-base.conf with my 1-liner).
Did you purge or remove pulseaudio?
I purged it.
Oh bugger, no sorry that's not going to work...
Take it out again plz
EDIT: well, you can try it, but I'm sure that won't actually work
Okay. I removed it.
Try creating /etc/modprobe.d/alsa-base.conf:
options snd_hda_intel index=1
I appended the line you gave me, since the file already exists with the following content:
# autoloader aliases
install sound-slot-0 /sbin/modprobe snd-card-0
install sound-slot-1 /sbin/modprobe snd-card-1
install sound-slot-2 /sbin/modprobe snd-card-2
install sound-slot-3 /sbin/modprobe snd-card-3
install sound-slot-4 /sbin/modprobe snd-card-4
install sound-slot-5 /sbin/modprobe snd-card-5
install sound-slot-6 /sbin/modprobe snd-card-6
install sound-slot-7 /sbin/modprobe snd-card-7
# Cause optional modules to be loaded above generic modules
install snd /sbin/modprobe --ignore-install snd && { /sbin/modprobe --quiet snd-ioctl32 ; /sbin/modprobe --quiet snd-seq ; : ; }
install snd-rawmidi /sbin/modprobe --ignore-install snd-rawmidi && { /sbin/modprobe --quiet snd-seq-midi ; : ; }
install snd-emu10k1 /sbin/modprobe --ignore-install snd-emu10k1 && { /sbin/modprobe --quiet snd-emu10k1-synth ; : ; }
# Keep snd-pcsp from beeing loaded as first soundcard
options snd-pcsp index=-2
# Keep snd-usb-audio from beeing loaded as first soundcard
options snd-usb-audio index=-2
# Prevent abnormal drivers from grabbing index 0
options bt87x index=-2
options cx88_alsa index=-2
options snd-atiixp-modem index=-2
options snd-intel8x0m index=-2
options snd-via82xx-modem index=-2
Edit: By the way I have removed Pulseaudio. Should I reinstall it?
Hello aldoilljazi, welcome to #!
Nice to meet you too
I am in love with #!
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