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Help me understand Flash problem


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Guest nomail1983@hotmail.com
Posted

Please help me understand a Flash problem. It is now mysteriously

fixed, but I would like to understand how.

 

I had uninstalled and re-installed the latest Adobe Flash (version

9). But when I went to a particular web (AARP driving safety "test

drive"), I did not get any audio.

 

I tried all the obvious things. I toggled the speaker off and on;

sliding the volume to the max. The audio and speaker hardware worked;

I was able to hear the audio on an e-card that I received recently.

In IE6, I enabled every add-on, cleared history and deleted cookies

and temp files (including offline content). I restarted the system.

 

"What made it work finally?" I think it was when I tried to play a

movie with RealPlayer. It used to work just fine; but now I was not

getting audio. Even though the RP speaker button indicated that it

was on, I decided to toggle it off and on. Voila! Audio out of RP.

Later, I tried the AARP "test drive" again. Voila! Audio out of

Flash.

 

What gives!?

 

I have a laptop. I can toggle volume on/off and control the volume 2

or 3 ways, depending on the application. I have keyboard buttons. I

have the speaker status icon on the right side of the desktop

toolbar. And in the case of RP, I can toggle volume on/off and

control the volume. (There might be a 4th way: the Control Panel.

But I ass-u-me that's the same as the speaker status icon.)

 

I had ass-u-me-d that these are just 3 ways of doing the same thing.

For example, I thought I could turn off the volume using the keyboard,

then turn it on using the speaker status icon or RP control.

 

Now I conclude that there are layers of control. Or perhaps it has

something to do with the registry.

 

Can someone give me an architectural overview of how all these

controls interact (or not)?

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Guest Vanguard
Posted

Re: Help me understand Flash problem

 

<nomail1983@hotmail.com> wrote in message

news:1183829263.373700.92540@g37g2000prf.googlegroups.com...

> Please help me understand a Flash problem. It is now mysteriously

> fixed, but I would like to understand how.

>

> I had uninstalled and re-installed the latest Adobe Flash (version

> 9). But when I went to a particular web (AARP driving safety "test

> drive"), I did not get any audio.

>

> I tried all the obvious things. I toggled the speaker off and on;

> sliding the volume to the max. The audio and speaker hardware worked;

> I was able to hear the audio on an e-card that I received recently.

> In IE6, I enabled every add-on, cleared history and deleted cookies

> and temp files (including offline content). I restarted the system.

>

> "What made it work finally?" I think it was when I tried to play a

> movie with RealPlayer. It used to work just fine; but now I was not

> getting audio. Even though the RP speaker button indicated that it

> was on, I decided to toggle it off and on. Voila! Audio out of RP.

> Later, I tried the AARP "test drive" again. Voila! Audio out of

> Flash.

>

> What gives!?

>

> I have a laptop. I can toggle volume on/off and control the volume 2

> or 3 ways, depending on the application. I have keyboard buttons. I

> have the speaker status icon on the right side of the desktop

> toolbar. And in the case of RP, I can toggle volume on/off and

> control the volume. (There might be a 4th way: the Control Panel.

> But I ass-u-me that's the same as the speaker status icon.)

>

> I had ass-u-me-d that these are just 3 ways of doing the same thing.

> For example, I thought I could turn off the volume using the keyboard,

> then turn it on using the speaker status icon or RP control.

>

> Now I conclude that there are layers of control. Or perhaps it has

> something to do with the registry.

>

> Can someone give me an architectural overview of how all these

> controls interact (or not)?

>

 

 

It sounds like you toggled the volume mute in RealPlayer. Might've also

worked in Windows Media Player or any other application that lets you

mute the audio. The toggling managed to set the mute to the correct

state. Apparently Flash got out of sync with the mute setting in the

registry.

 

As an experiment, I used InstallWatch to see what registry changes were

made when I changed from unmuted to muted and from muted to unmuted.

What I saw were:

 

Unmuted:

Key =

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Class\{4D36E96C-E325-11CE-BFC1-08002BE10318}\0018\Settings\Ac97

Data item = MasterMute

Data value = hex:0,0,0,0

 

Muted:

Key =

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Class\{4D36E96C-E325-11CE-BFC1-08002BE10318}\0018\Settings\Ac97

Data item = MasterMute

Data value = hex:1,0,0,0

 

Flash has its own .sol cookies, one of which is the master cookie for

your settings. Go to any site with Flash and right-click on the Flash

content and select Settings. Notice that while there is a selection for

microphone input sensitivity that there is no setting for output volume

level, so I suspect that Flash doesn't use its own audio player but

relies on whatever audio application is associated with the filetype for

the audio. Maybe that was your RealPlayer app.

 

Did you ever open the sound mixer (by double-clicking on the tray icon

for volume control) to check that the master and wave volume sliders

were at acceptable levels and that wave wasn't set to muted (you can

separately mute different audio types)? It is also possible that you

have another mixer controller program installed for your particular

chipset or soundcard. For example, my mobo uses the nForce chipset so I

have the NvMixer app installed that can also control muting and volume

levels.

Guest nomail1983@hotmail.com
Posted

Re: Help me understand Flash problem

 

On Jul 7, 1:57 pm, "Vanguard" <n...@mail.invalid> wrote:

> It sounds like you toggled the volume mute in RealPlayer. Might've also

> worked in Windows Media Player or any other application that lets you

> mute the audio. The toggling managed to set the mute to the correct

> state. Apparently Flash got out of sync with the mute setting in the

> registry.

 

Thanks for the explanation. I will have to study this further.


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