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Does it work on windows, but not on linux?
I saw a similar question, it seems, even on a toaster, my spider sense tells me that the case is similar to the situation in that question. In general, there is sound on Windows, on any version of Linux, bootable or not, there is no sound. In that question, there was a conversation that Windows is too lazy to initialize the sound (xs driver) every time and therefore does not turn it off (something like this), so you need to disable everything on Windows, go to Linux and everything will be kosher, but here's how and what turn off (the sound is understandable), but here's where and how to make sure that I turned it off, I xs
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I'm sorry, I just don't believe you. As you describe it does not happen. Unless, of course, you have some rare marginality instead of sound that is not supported by the Linux kernel.
That's what after booting into linux in Windows, there is no sound, and vice versa. You have read about it. There is a problem with the fact that someone does not work correctly with the sound system (Windows, judging by all the moments that I encountered). But whatever there is no sound in Linux, and even in any, you are just lying.
And so:
lspci in your teeth and Google to meet you.
Any initialization, if related to Windows, should disappear on a cold start.
And as one of the comrades said - lspci to the studio, otherwise all this is guesswork. Well, the model of the motherboard or whatever you have would not hurt either. You ask for a technical answer, but you don't give any specific data.
Perhaps it's the firewood:
After updating Ubuntu 16.04, the resolution went wrong. How to return?
Once there was a case when there was no sound, because it was turned off :) The volume was stupidly removed to zero. I couldn’t understand what was the matter, it was a long time ago, I remember that some kind of console application solved the issue, or alsamixer, or something else. But it was on 2.6.32. On 4.x - no matter how much I torture him here - there have never been problems with sound. Well, unless it's some kind of rare zvukovuha.
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