![]() So aptX is clearly used for the Bluetooth connection: I see a similar report here, however, that seems to be a simple one, because the flatpak Firefox does work there. I manually neeeded to enable the plugin for OpenH264 in about:addons in Firefox and could double-check in about:plugins that it is installed. Nextcloud-client-nautilus compat-ffmpeg28 lshw kid3ĪMD® Ryzen 7 4800u with radeon graphics × 16 More debugging Gstreamer1-plugin-openh264 git-credential-libsecret smartmontools zsh Gnome-tweaks adb nvme-cli openssl nautilus-image-converter mozilla-openh264 ![]() Podman-compose tldr simple-scan rpmfusion-free-release nextcloud-client htop dconf-editor LayeredPackages: httpie git keepassxc gtkhash-nautilus sushi heimdall git-subtree firewall-config RemovedBasePackages: pipewire-pulseaudio 0.3.40-1.fc35 Signature made Di 17:10:26 CET using RSA key ID DB4639719867C58F $ rpm-ostree status -vĪutomaticUpdates: stage rpm-ostreed-automatic.timer: no runs since boot I do have all packages layered from rpm-fusion that I know of that are/were needed. In VLC I can hear sound and all videos in Totem and the browser play without any problem. So, however, when I connect my Bluetooth headset, everything works again. Note I also have aptX support installed from rpmfusion and strangely did not need to uninstall/remove it during upgrade. So actually audio seems to be the problem and not video! The crazy “solution” (not actually one) However, when I press the test buttons, I can hear nothing. So I noticed that also the GNOME sound settings will show me the laptop speakers as wanted. ![]()
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