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I have my own audio challenge. Having given up trying to get MiniMyth (no ATI graphics support) or MythBuntu (X crashes all the time using proprietary driver) on an A780-based AMD motherboard, I turned to openSUSE 11.1. A lot more works out of the box with openSUSE but one thing that doesn't is HDMI audio. In fact I ran into an issue with some apps working and some not when I grabbed an old-fashioned analog cable to plug into the line-out jack. I presume some apps look for the analog, some look for something else. Basically, modern PCs are now so complex that there are about 3 different ways to do most everything, and application developers tear their hair out trying to accommodate the mix. (And note that this particular PC is about as simple as a brand-new PC can get: motherboard plugs into wall, HDMI cable plugs into TV, keyboard and infrared transceiver plug into USB--done.) The other symptom I had with this PC is the video, but I figured that one out on my own: with the radeonhd X11 driver, you get a good 1920x1080p image, but it's not fast enough to deliver smooth video. With the fglrx driver, you get a nice image--that covers only 80% of the screen. A lot of googling turned up the answer to that: an obscure series of 4 aticonfig commands to set the screen coordinates and X/Y size. The last two minor revs of the ATI driver have a bogus scaling setting that gives you 80% of your TV. Linux is "almost" ready for the desktop, but figure on several days to several weeks after setting up a new PC to get things set up the way you want. Linux was "almost" ready to run desktop apps sometime around, oh, 1997. It's more so now. ;-) -rich
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