this post was submitted on 07 Oct 2025
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Asklemmy
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Man i wish Mint worked out of the box as well as virtually everyone on here says it does.
I am a former software engineer, and don't want my home PC to be a hobby. I'm like 6 hours into trying to make my (simple) audio setup work on Mint Cinnamon and it's intermittent at best. Never have even thought about it on Windows.
It is plug and play compared to Linux of old, it's clearly come a long way. But it's nowhere near as easy as Windows still, for anyone who isn't trying to make this a hobby
That's exactly how I feel about it as well and largely contributes to my hesitation.
I read and hear how so many people just gush and gush about how Linux Mint or this distro just 'works out of the box'. What they don't tell you, is how they must have had to spend hours getting something to work. Like sure, Linux Mint or a more friendlier distro will work out of the box - if you do nothing but just browse online and maybe install/uninstall programs you may want or need from the software package manager.
But I have had my battles before trying to make things work on linux distros, like getting proprietary functions of a browser to work. Hell, I have even had to fight a little just to get a displaying clock! Like with its formatting from 24hr to 12hr, I'm not saying getting it to display or anything but I don't get this desire to default to a 24hr format. And I have had to fight at times to switch formats.
The point is, I or others should not have to spend more time than we need to, to get things to work when there is already an OS that readily does that without question. It doesn't make us dumb, it doesn't make us incurious or boring or uninterested in computers and technology. It's about patience and respect of time and if some Linux distro is not going to respect my time or patience, regardless of how welcoming it appears, then it is not worth swapping to.
What (simple) audio setup? Does it rely on proprietary software?
Nope. Motherboard SPDIF to ("dumb") speakers. Can't get the mobo SPDIF out to work in Mint.
I'm certain if I sink enough hours in I can figure something out but like 6 hours into troubleshooting this I decided I didn't have the bandwidth to take 100% of my fun time away to do what feels like my job to me.
I'm sure you've spent a lot of time trying different things, this is what I found:
In Linux Mint's sound settings (Applications -> Preferences -> Sound), under the Hardware tab, choose a profile that does NOT mention anything digital or IEC. For example, select "Analog Stereo Duplex." This can help PulseAudio avoid blocking the digital output and allow passthrough to work properly through ALSA.
Use alsamixer in a terminal to select the motherboard's sound device and ensure SPDIF outputs are enabled and not muted. Sometimes SPDIF is muted by default.
In terminal, run gstreamer-properties and set Default Output to ALSA with the digital device as the output. This bypasses PulseAudio and can solve passthrough issues.
Not actually sure if any of that will help, but I tried. ๐