gnome-sound-recorder does not record
Affects | Status | Importance | Assigned to | Milestone | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
gnome-media (Ubuntu) |
Confirmed
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Undecided
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Unassigned |
Bug Description
gnome-sound-
Failure was, initially, an attempt to get it recording streaming audio out of the box.
That having failed, I tried changing its options, and my (alsa) sound options. Failing that I started looking for help online: the problem looked horribly complex and the way to a solution looked frought with difficulty, with a horrendously steep learning curve. It looked like I might have to learn all about Linux's underlying sound system just to get the recording device to work. I gave up and went back to my work without the hope that I might go an as before, doing the recording of streaming audio that had been an essential part of it.
That was nearly a year ago when I upgraded to Xubuntu, and I have recovered the same steps again occassionally, just to check it still wasn't working, and just to check that I've not seen an easy solution because I'm stupid. I think I have come to understand that I'm not stupid; I'm a user. And the sound recorder doesn't work.
In the sound-recorder interface, the options are stuck.
'Record from input' offers only one option: Master
'Record as' offers no options: it is blank.
Pressing record does nothing. The sound level indicator is flat.
I have played with some of the settings in the user interface for (Alsa) sound preferences. But it has acheived nothing. Most of the settings in the Alsa interface are not written in English anyway. They are written in some sort of arcane sound architecture language that can be understood by nobody but sound software experts, programmers and perhaps linux computer administrators.
The Alsa output options are actually refreshingly comprehensible. They are written in plain English. But it's input options are gibberish. The Campaign for Plain English are worth a ganders. The idea of plain English is not that you have to write everything in goo-goo baby-language, or spell it out as if it is thought that users are idiots. You just have to write user interfaces in a way that allows people not immersed in the arcane world of sound architectures to use them.
This is a bug because it doesn't work and because there is no way for a sensible user to find any reasonable way of getting it working.
ProblemType: Bug
DistroRelease: Ubuntu 13.04
Package: gnome-media 3.4.0-1ubuntu1
ProcVersionSign
Uname: Linux 3.8.0-30-generic x86_64
ApportVersion: 2.9.2-0ubuntu8.3
Architecture: amd64
Date: Wed Sep 25 10:15:30 2013
InstallationDate: Installed on 2012-11-28 (300 days ago)
InstallationMedia: Xubuntu 12.10 "Quantal Quetzal" - Release amd64 (20121017.1)
MarkForUpload: True
SourcePackage: gnome-media
UpgradeStatus: Upgraded to raring on 2013-05-14 (133 days ago)
Woah there though. My description of Alsa user interface settings is only the *impression* I have after being unable to make any sense of them. The input settings are actually described in fairly plain English. All of the settings are not. And in combination, the effect is to overwhlem the user with technical gibberish. The programmers have obviously put a lot of effort into making an user-friendly interface. It just seems there's work to be done because it doesn't work and the interface doesn't help. So you are left with two choices: blame the sound interface or blame the sound recorder. I blame both. The one fails to work, the other fails to make any sense. And that is the crucial thing about the sound interface - it's hard to make sense of what should be a simple thing. I simply need to record streaming audio.