Баси, нема ли гугъл за вас бе хора??
http://5105-s607.tripod.com/#sound
Sound
The sound card, though it claims to be some kind of Yamaha
(YMF753 I think) actually uses the intel810 driver. I use
ALSA with this card; just install the ALSA drivers and set
up your computer to autoload the modules snd-intel8x0 and
snd-pcm-oss (if you want OSS compatibility) on boot. You can
also use standard kernel sound if you like. The sound works
fine, and the small LCD/buttons on the front can even be
used to play cd's when the computer is off. The small LCD
has a little visualization scope that shows bars of varying
heights when sound is playing, even under linux.
http://www.met.ed.ac.uk/~hcp/t9000.html
Lspci lists this device as an Intel Corp AC97 audio
controller. Toshiba's web pages list it as an AC 97 (YAMAHA
YMF753). The OSS modules that you actually need are
i810_audio (Intel ICH audio support) and ac97_codec (Yamaha
YMF7xx PCI Audio (native mode)). What you don't need is the
module ymfpci (Yamaha YMF7xx PCI Audio (native mode)).
This sound card won't work at low speeds or with u-law
encoded sound like Sun's .au files. This means that many
older programs that send 8kHz 8-bit audio directly to
/dev/audio don't work or make odd chirpy noises. (Including
xboing and Doom. Bummer!). I'm wondering if there is some
way to remove /dev/audio and replace it with some magic that
sends the sound via esd. It was suggested to me that the
right thing to do was to use ALSA instead of OSS. I tried
that, and indeed it is a huge improvement -- xboing and doom
now make the right noises again. Configuring ALSA under
Debian was a bit of an adventure, mind you. The module you
need is called snd-intel8x0. There are still a few apps
which have odd or jerky sound. (QuicktimePlayer.exe running
under wine is one.)
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