Dominique Michel <dominique.c.michel@gmail.com> writes:
> Le Fri, 15 Feb 2019 07:22:29 +0100,
> Alf Haakon Pietruszka Lund <alf@mellomrommet.no> a écrit :
>
>> Hello all,
>>
>> I'm considering to test Linux mint for my 'sound machine' - a normal
>> laptop that's used for modest recording and editing of sounds and
>> music, as well as miscellaneous office work.
>
> For me, the main issue with laptops is the audio hardware, not the
> distribution. The analogue part of their combined mic/line audio inputs
> are optimized for a sound level of 0dB, which correspond to their line
> level.
>
> In order to get the best possible sound of it, you must set the input
> level at 0dB with alsamixer, run a vu-meter, connect it to the input
> and use an external mixer or device to set the recording level on the
> vu-meter. That way, you can get a decent sound quality even with the
> built-in audio card.
In my experience, "decent" is overoptimistic. Sound _output_ tends to
be quite ok for a number of purposes, sound input is where you are
usually a lot better off using an external soundcard unless you are
talking about voicecall-compatible quality (and many laptops indeed have
combined microphone/headphone sockets for headsets). Of course, the
kind of soundcard for $20 when new does not offer better quality either
but might have different input/output/level/mixer options ("surround
sound" and its ilk, for example).
What I sometimes find annoying is that laptop built-in devices tend to
have more comprehensive ALSA support particularly regarding the mixer
than external soundcards but it's probably due to more people being in
possession of them.
-- David Kastrup _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@lists.linuxaudio.org https://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-userReceived on Tue Feb 19 12:15:02 2019
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