Skip to content

This issue was moved to a discussion.

You can continue the conversation there. Go to discussion →

New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

forgets settings #23

Closed
wd401959 opened this issue Aug 13, 2015 · 10 comments
Closed

forgets settings #23

wd401959 opened this issue Aug 13, 2015 · 10 comments

Comments

@wd401959
Copy link

Can you please create an ini file to remember settings for various apps volume settings

@tobbi007
Copy link

would really like to see this happening some time.

@roncli
Copy link

roncli commented Mar 10, 2016

Agreed, there are times where EarTrumpet just randomly seems to set things to ridiculously low volumes. Tends to happen when using voice applications that attenuate other application volumes.

@riverar
Copy link
Contributor

riverar commented Mar 10, 2016

EarTrumpet just surfaces Windows audio sessions and their internals. But will consider this, thanks.

@riverar riverar mentioned this issue Apr 1, 2016
@ams2990
Copy link

ams2990 commented May 2, 2016

+1, I want to adjust an app's volume once and have it persist.

@wjwaldron
Copy link

Yes, definitely!

@equin0x80
Copy link

It seems to me that the volume levels are preserved correctly for traditional desktop applications but not for the new-style "universal apps" in Windows 10. For example, every time I launch Microsoft Mahjong (from the Windows Store), the volume bar is at 100%, and the sounds are annoyingly loud.

@Wuestengecko
Copy link

What @equin0x80 said is in fact a design decision. They actually completely removed volume mixing for metro-style (aka Modern UI) apps in Win8, to "make the user experience easier" (i guess). See the following blog post: https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/windowsappdev/2012/08/23/media-playback-what-you-need-to-know-about-playing-media-to-make-your-app-shine-in-windows-8/

It basically boils down to "it might confuse some users, and also we didn't know how to neatly integrate it into Windows 8, so we entirely removed it". ET being able to mix them at all might be because it ignores some info provided by the backend that removes the metro apps from the stock mixer. (Please keep ignoring this info, if that's the case! ;) )

@roncli
Copy link

roncli commented Aug 25, 2016

I do not believe this to be related to Universal Apps. The app I am using that attenuates other apps' sounds is Discord, and afterwards I often see Chrome and System Sounds set extremely low after use.

To be fair, it's an extremely rare bug, and I can't consistently reproduce it, but it does happen occasionally.

@riverar
Copy link
Contributor

riverar commented Aug 25, 2016

Can't see how this is related to EarTrumpet. Do you have audio ducking enabled? It can typically kick in at unwanted times, despite what the dialog says.

image

@roncli
Copy link

roncli commented Aug 25, 2016

My Communications tab matches yours, "Do nothing" is the selected option.

This is the feature in Discord that attenuates (I think that's also audio ducking).

image

This issue was moved to a discussion.

You can continue the conversation there. Go to discussion →

Labels
None yet
Projects
None yet
Development

No branches or pull requests

8 participants