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by guywhocodes
1636 days ago
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Not everyone is a power user. At this time I was in university and Linux went from a reasonable choice to an unreasonable due to sound not working again. If you care about real world usage, PA set us back years when Ubuntu made it default. |
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But that's the crux, isn't it? Linux sound was not not-working because of PA. Linux sound was not working because it was fundamentally broken with drivers that had wildly different behaviors. Everyone was hacking around broken drivers all the time, I distinctly remember how I had to recompile the kernel back then to get some custom-fixes for my setup in because the driver was so kaput.
Only with the introduction of PA was there finally a way to test and evaluate the drivers in a systematic fashion.
So, in short, my point is this; any software that - in this broken state of Linux audio - tried to introduce a software that made available the features the drivers proclaimed would have run into exactly the same problem as PA. Because PA didn't introduce the problem, PA made it visible.
It's like blaming the doctor for diagnosing the illness.
So, while your experience was that sound suddenly wasn't working anymore because Ubuntu configured the default setup to use PA, for lots of people that sound never worked this was fine - because their drivers weren't broken.