On Fri, 22 Sep 2017 20:47:03 -0700 Eric Oyen wrote: > um yeah. trying to get sound running under an OS without any kind of > speech output or braille support can be a real trick. Not sure how I > can do that without a sighted assistant (and no one in my pad > qualifies as anything other than an appliance operator). I have an idea that might work. First, get rid of Pulseaudio. That thing has too many hard to find mutes, and its interrelationships with ALSA and hardware are too convoluted to easily troubleshoot. Run pure ALSA, using apulse for the occasional thing that *must* have pulseaudio. Now, exclusively use aplay, arecord, amixer and sound-test, every one of which is CLI, to configure your sound. I'm assuming you have some sort of way to read terminal output, because you participate on this mailing list. If you absolutely, positively refuse to get rid of Pulseaudio, the following article might (or might not) be of service: http://terokarvinen.com/2015/volume-control-with-pulseaudio-command-line-tools I've been using Void Linux for about 18 months, and find it an excellent distro to do things my way, which is usually the simple way. With Void, I'm able to do all necessary sound stuff with ALSA and the occasional invocation of apulse. Void does an excellent job of letting you configure your machine your way. HTH, SteveT Steve Litt September 2017 featured book: Manager's Guide to Technical Troubleshooting Brand new, second edition http://www.troubleshooters.com/mgr --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss