![]() You will need a 3.5mm cable that can attach to the headphone jack in front to the line in in back. It works! It's the suckiest sound ever with some unstable hacking, but it does work. ![]() So I followed up my own comment with an actual experiment, to run a cable from the headphone jack to the line in. I don't know what is left to do as far as getting full audio support from Teamviewer since I have yet to see them address this issue, other than a hint that we may have to pay for a license to get audio.Īny ideas of somehow routing a cable from the audio out port to the microphone port for input? :) ![]() So we know that sound and audio can work. ![]() Granted this doesn't give sound, but it does allow sound and video from whatever teleconferencing hardware that may be hooked up. So I have a command in the rc.local file that deletes the audio device and allows the TV VoIP to work. When this isn't loaded, the TV VoIP module is allowed to load, but disappears when the nVidia audio is loaded. What changed? Well, although my card does not have HDMI ports, it seems that it still has an HDMI audio chip inside. I needed the nVidia driver back, so I reinstalled it, rebooted, and the TV VoIP module was gone from pulseaudio. I hadn't seen this before and thought it was weird. When I went into the pulseaudio sound manager, I saw that I had the TV VoIP module loaded. So I found out yesterday that I had accidentlally uninstalled my nVidia drivers, which caused my Kubuntu server to default to the open source driver.
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