
I just got Knoppix to work with my sound card, Creative Audigy 2. That was the coolest thing, hearing the female voice saying 'Initializing startup sequence, and Initializing shut-down sequence' or something like that. Is that a Knoppix thing, or an Alsa thing? I used the cheat code to get alsa working.I would like to get alsa working without a cheat code. I think it has to be added to the kernel as a module, but could someone point me in the right direction for doing that? I remember something about typing in 'make' in a console once when i was fooling around with Mandrake.
That site simply lifted the shutdown and startup OGG files from Knoppix Linux and turned them. Or you could rip the sounds from the computer in the recent Star. Love the female voices at startup and shutdown. Change startup sound in Linux Mint 13. You can now check or uncheck the listed sounds or choose new ones from. Knoppix Startup Ogg Sound Recorder. 3/18/2017 0 Comments Building a PVR What is a PVR? I might try installing knoppix onto it over a network but thats for the future. During the startup process, Knoppix will automatically detect the network card. Click the 'opensource.ogg' file.
Linda,I think its a 'knoppix' thing.But, I am sure, you can change it, either through a setting, or by naming a sound file the same as the one it expects.I have 'always' been a collector of sound clips, my best setup was for my Windows95/98 system. Considering the amount of time it took for the system to boot, I had the Alan Sheppard 'moon' quote: 'That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind', and when I was shutting down, I used the movie quote from Aliens: 'Game over man, Game over'Just some thoughts,Ms. Linda,The 'Initiating Startup Sequence' sound can be found at /usr/share/sounds/startup.oggand the 'Initiating Shutdown Sequence' sound can be found at /usr/share/sounds/shutdown.oggAlso, the 'music' that is played after the above 'voice' can be found at the same location, but the files are called:KDEStartup.wav and KDELogout.wavTons of sounds can be found if you type: locate.wav in a console window (click on the little icon on the bottom of the screen that looks like a monitor with a clam shell in front of it). To exit from this screen/window, just type: exit and it should close.Hope this helps,Ms.

Well, what I meant was that if you run the live CD from a knoppix26 boot prompt, it doesn't play the sounds by default, as it does when booting the default 2.4 kernel without any boot prompt.I had assumed that it was on the disk somewhere. On the bug wiki for 2004-05-10, Fabian said something about linux tag not wanting to pay for the rights any more.
Odd, that in this open source alternative reality where linux thrives, where people give away several-hundred megabyte software for free, you'd think that they could find someone to volunteer to record six simple words for free.JD.
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I have a remastered compactflash version of knoppix 3.4When I boot knoppix, my onboard soundcard (AC-97) is recognized and configured (using OSS, not ALSA). If I boot into single user mode, my soundcard is functional, since typing the following command at a prompt enables me to hear something:cat file.au /dev/dsp (also I can redirect to /dev/audio)However, once booting into KDE 3.4, the soundcard is no longer accessable. Typing the above command at a prompt returns 'device or resource busy'How can I keep KDE from causing a conflict with my soundcard?