
Linux.FR has an
interview with Lennart Poettering of PulseAudio and systemd fame (among others). Regarding PulseAudio: "I can understand why people were upset, but quite frankly we didn't really have another option than to push it into the distributions when we did. While PulseAudio certainly wasn't bug-free when the distributions picked it up the majority of issues were actually not in PulseAudio itself but simply in the audio drivers. PulseAudio's timer-based scheduling requires correct timing information supplied by the audio driver, and back then the drivers weren't really providing that. And that not because the drivers were really broken, but more because the hardware was, and the drivers just lacked the right set of work-arounds, quirks and fixes to compensate for it."
Member since:
2005-07-06
The logical thing to do when faced with that is to fix ALSA or accept that using ALSA was wrong. Retro-fitting another userspace layer over the top and trying to justify it is the wrong choice.
I take it Pulse still isn't a system service?