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[solved] pulseaudio and Lenny: I'm at a dead end - Debian ...

    https://forums.debian.net/viewtopic.php?t=30221
    I have a machine on which the sounds works great with Ubuntu 8.04, although I use Debian as the main OS. I love Debian, but I can't get sound working at all. It's a Toshiba u400 with all intel (intel graphics, intel sound, intel wireless). It's Lenny, although with kernel 2.6.26 from sid. First question: how do I rid of pulseaudio?

Debian -- Security Information -- DSA-2017-1 pulseaudio

    https://www.debian.org/security/2010/dsa-2017
    For the stable distribution (lenny), this problem has been fixed in version 0.9.10-3+lenny2. For the testing (squeeze) and unstable (sid) distribution this problem will be fixed soon. We recommend that you upgrade your pulseaudio package. Fixed in: Debian GNU/Linux 5.0 (lenny)

PulseAudio apparently doesn't like me - Debian User Forums

    https://forums.debian.net/viewtopic.php?t=33607
    The # recommend way to run PulseAudio is as a per-session daemon. For GNOME # sessions you can install pulseaudio-esound-compat and GNOME will # automatically start PulseAudio on login (if ESD is enabled in # System->Preferences->Sound).

Debian -- Details of package pulseaudio in buster

    https://packages.debian.org/buster/pulseaudio
    PulseAudio, previously known as Polypaudio, is a sound server for POSIX and WIN32 systems. It is a drop in replacement for the ESD sound server with much better latency, mixing/re-sampling quality and overall architecture. These are some of PulseAudio's features:

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