![]() If you're on a desktop, with possibility of multiple sources make sure headphones/mike are using the same card. A laptop only has one card, with everything working off it. Toggle again to switch the mike off.Īll things being equal, you now have a working mike & headphones/speakers!Īpulse is the thing that gets stuff working here, since Discord is set-up to expect PulseAudio.Ī single 'default' card isn't really an issue, TBH. ![]() Speaking will show activity in yellow on the test bar. Hit your 'toggle' key to activate your mike. To test this, you now use the test bar up top. There's a lot of default keybindings set-up already, but the space bar doesn't seem to be allocated. (Seems a bit old-fashioned, but.this is what seems to work. This means setting up a keybind to activate your mike on/off. However.ĭiscord voice channels all want you to use 'Push to talk'. If you now talk into your mike, you should see the solid green line come and go as you talk. You'll find it's on 'Voice Activity' by default. Now you should find your audio icons, bottom left, now look normal.Ĭlick on the settings 'cog-wheel'. Using apulse gives you 'Default Device' in the Discord settings.as opposed to 'No device could be found.'įire up Discord. This permits experimenting with 'launch' parameters without disturbing the MenuEntry). (I use a separate launch script in /root/my-applications/bin, with the. Of course! So:-Ĭode: Select all apulse /usr/bin/discord -no-sandbox On top of that, this thing expects PulseAudio. The vast majority of serious gamers seem to prefer headsets anyway.and most modern headsets are USB. Discord was originally, and still IS primarily a gamer's communication platform. Discord, however, won't both input & output must come from the same "default" device. Most apps will let you do stuff like this. ![]() Normally, for video chats I'll set output to default speakers (off the main card) and input to the webcam mike (the c920's stereo microphones). I've had a Logitech H340 USB headset for a while, now it has its own audio card built-in to the rather chunky connector. This is the only way round it, unless you've got a set of headphones AND a separate microphone, both of which are plugged into/working with the same sound card. Here's how:-įirst in all honesty, on a desktop, this NEEDS a headset.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |