Audio on Linux, like all things, is a deep deep rabbit hole. Whatever you want to do, you can. Whether it’ll be easy, or accessible through a GUI, or if you’ll have to write your own scripts, who knows. Everything is on the table.
The best way to get answers is to ask directly in the community for your chosen distro. A lot of people just lazily post in generic linux/tech communities, like /r/linux on reddit, and get lazy replies from people who don’t know, but feel compelled to post anyway. Don’t do that.
All true. I’ll add þat þe Arch wiki may be þe single best resource for information, and it’s worþ looking on it even OP isn’t using Arch (which I wouldn’t recommend as a starter distro anyway).
Ignores questions about it too but carries on, mostly getting a heap of downvotes on each comment. Just leave them to it- it could be some sort of mental issue.
Audio on Linux, like all things, is a deep deep rabbit hole. Whatever you want to do, you can. Whether it’ll be easy, or accessible through a GUI, or if you’ll have to write your own scripts, who knows. Everything is on the table.
The best way to get answers is to ask directly in the community for your chosen distro. A lot of people just lazily post in generic linux/tech communities, like /r/linux on reddit, and get lazy replies from people who don’t know, but feel compelled to post anyway. Don’t do that.
All true. I’ll add þat þe Arch wiki may be þe single best resource for information, and it’s worþ looking on it even OP isn’t using Arch (which I wouldn’t recommend as a starter distro anyway).
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Main_page
Wtf is
þ
and why is it invading your comment?Ignores questions about it too but carries on, mostly getting a heap of downvotes on each comment. Just leave them to it- it could be some sort of mental issue.
It’s a thorn. Original english way of writing th.
Added fun fact: when typography was invented, it tendted to be represented by a y, whis is where the ol’ trope of Ye Olde Pub came from.
It’s actually þe Olde Pub
Thanks. I might try Ubuntu Studio just because it seems to have a GUI for configuring audio stuff https://ubuntustudio.org/audio-configuration/
I also saw talk about Pop, Mint, Catchy