Hi,

I just bought a brand new LG Gram. For the 2 minutes that I used Windows, the speakers worked fine. Since I installed pop OS the speakers don’t work at all. I even tried reinstalling the whole entire OS and they still aren’t working.

Thanks in advance!

https://linux-hardware.org/?probe=e9f8c192f1

  • AmYisraelChai@lemmy.worldOP
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    9 months ago

    The script worked ran this time but there’s still no sound. :-( Thank you so so so much though, I really appreciate your help! Let me know if you’ve got any other tricks up your sleeve ;-)

    • pnutzh4x0r@lemmy.ndlug.org
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      9 months ago

      Hmm. Unfortunately, if the script doesn’t work then you probably need a different set of verbs for your particular laptop model. I’m not really sure how to determine which verbs to use. Sorry :|

      Actually, after a quick look, I found an entry on the Arch Linux Wiki:

      https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/LG_Gram_16_2-in-1_2023

      This says there might be a workaround here:

      https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=212041#c14

      It would be the same idea: download a script with a bunch of verbs, run the script, and see if the speakers work.

      Perhaps one of the scripts in that comment will work for your laptop.

        • pnutzh4x0r@lemmy.ndlug.org
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          9 months ago

          Great, I’m glad you now have sound :)

          To have the script run at boot, you need to create a service file:

          sudo gedit /etc/systemd/system/necessary-verbs.service
          

          That should open a text editor that you can write into. You can replace gedit with vim or nano if you prefer those.

          In that file, you want to put the following contents:

          [Unit]
          Description=Run internal speaker fix script at startup
          After=getty.target
          
          [Service]
          Type=simple
          ExecStart=/usr/local/sbin/necessary-verbs.sh
          TimeoutStartSec=0
          
          [Install]
          WantedBy=default.target 
          

          Once you save that file, you can enable it as follows:

          sudo systemctl daemon-reload
          sudo systemctl enable necessary-verbs.service
          

          Now, when you boot, this service will run that script and thus setup your audio.

          See if you can get that to work.

          • AmYisraelChai@lemmy.worldOP
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            9 months ago

            Thank you so so so much for taking the time to write that! But before I read you message I actually had to restart my laptop for a different reason and the sound still works. This is very weird because it said in the link to the script that it wouldn’t still work after a reboot, but it is. Thanks again so much!!!