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let me give you my situation,<br>I have an aspire one netbook and the
internal mic is stereo but the 2 channels are combined 180 degrees out
of phase so if left and right channels are set to similar levels there
is no sound recorded. <br>
<br>The solution is to open pulse audio volume control and set one channel to zero and the other to an appropriate level.<br><br>A
well behaved program such as skype has the option to adjust audio
settings automatically or not. (naturally not is appropriate)<br>
google voice and video plugin doesn't have this option and sets both
audio input channels to the same level resulting in silence.<br>As a consequence the input settings for skype have also been lost.<br><br>It
seems wrong that 2 user level programs should be interacting like this ,
it appears that the audio input settings are set for the system not for
the application or the user. <br>
<br>There are a number of possible ways to tackle this problem <br>rewrite applications to play nice but one rogue application wrecks that plan.<br>allow input settings to be set per application - better but perhaps over engineered/<br>
allow users to set the input volume levels probably as root and then deny any changes requested by user level programs. <br>This
would appear to be near ideal certainly it makes sense for a user to be
able to determine suitable levels and not be over ridden by a browser
plugin. <br>
<br>any chance that the super user can set and lock the input levels?<br><br>cheers<br><br>bk<br>                                            </body>
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